this website will only be updated the deal with the special publication based on our Helsinki 2007 meeting:
From geovisualization toward geovisual
analytics
program
The
nature of maps and of their use in science and society is in the midst
of remarkable change - change that is stimulated by a combination
of new scientific and societal needs for georeferenced information
and rapidly evolving technologies that can provide that information
in innovative ways. A key issue at the heart of this change is the
concept of visualization.
Cartography
has always been about visualization - in the sense of making aspects
of our world visible. Today, building on a centuries long tradition,
cartography is an active participant in fostering fundamental changes
in the nature of information representation and how it is used in
science, education, and society. These changes draw upon and contribute
to developments in the relatively new fields of Scientific
Visualization
and multimedia and they are directed toward the integration of dynamic
representations within the sciences for which georeferenced representations
are critical (geography, geology, ecology, hydrology, meteorology,
and others). The key objectives of the ICA Commission on Visualization
are development of innovative approaches to and applications of dynamic
cartographic visualization and the sharing of perspectives on visualization
with the wider scientific community.