2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2008.11.010
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Modeling spatial variations of urban growth patterns in Chinese cities: The case of Nanjing

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Cited by 262 publications
(178 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…In general, slope and elevation are acknowledged as the most important topographic factors that affect urban growth (Braimoh & Onishi, 2007;Reilly, O'Mara, & Seto, 2009;Ye, Zhang, Liu, & Wu, 2013). For socioeconomic factors, proximity factors such as distance to road (Luo & Wei, 2009;Müller et al, 2010;Poelmans & Rompaey, 2009), distance to socioeconomic center (Vermeiren, Rompaey, Loopmans, Serwajja, & Mukwaya, 2012) and distance to water (Cheng & Masser, 2003;Luo & Wei, 2009) are crucial influential factors that determine urban growth. Roads and socioeconomic centers always play a significant role in urbanization as they provide residents higher accessibility to daily needs and resources.…”
Section: Selection Of Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, slope and elevation are acknowledged as the most important topographic factors that affect urban growth (Braimoh & Onishi, 2007;Reilly, O'Mara, & Seto, 2009;Ye, Zhang, Liu, & Wu, 2013). For socioeconomic factors, proximity factors such as distance to road (Luo & Wei, 2009;Müller et al, 2010;Poelmans & Rompaey, 2009), distance to socioeconomic center (Vermeiren, Rompaey, Loopmans, Serwajja, & Mukwaya, 2012) and distance to water (Cheng & Masser, 2003;Luo & Wei, 2009) are crucial influential factors that determine urban growth. Roads and socioeconomic centers always play a significant role in urbanization as they provide residents higher accessibility to daily needs and resources.…”
Section: Selection Of Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The image for urban land expansion has 2318 × 2059 pixels, a huge dataset that is difficult to handle, and a proper sampling method is required. To reduce the spatial dependence and ensure that the sample represents the population, we used a spatial sampling method combining systematical sampling and random sampling [8,24]. First, we extracted regularly spaced points with a 10-pixel (300 m) interval from the nonurban areas in the 1991 image.…”
Section: Land Use Data Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the rapid urbanization in China is also accompanied by arable land loss, landscape fragmentation, and sustainability challenges [1,5,6]. Many efforts have been made to analyze the complex pattern of urban land expansion and understand the underlying factors [7][8][9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…GWR was introduced to the geographical and spatial econometric literature by Brunsdon et al in 1996, formalised by Fotheringham et al in 2002, later by Charlton and Fotheringham (2009 and extended by Nakaya et al (2009). This technique subsequently has received considerable attention in recent years to model spatially varying relationships between dependent and an explanatory variables in real estate and various other fields including ecology (for example, Wang et al, 2005), urban structure (for example, Luo and Wei, 2009;Mohd Shariff and Rainis, 2009), land use change (for example, Hanham et al, 2009;Wang et al, 2011) and political geography (for example, Calvo and Escolar, 2003). However, since this paper focuses on real estate, the discussion in this section will be concentrating on the applications of GWR technique in the relevant research areas.…”
Section: Geographically Weighted Regression (Gwr) Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%