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Geovisualization and Spatial Analysis of Cancer Data

by SAL Plone Administrator last modified 2006-08-22 18:22

Current Projects


Project Team and Funding

Alan MacEachren, Mark Gahegan, Pennsylvania State University (Project Website)
Luc Anselin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Sponsor: National Cancer Institute
Time Frame: April 2002 to December 2007

Project Overview

This project is a five-year research project funded by the National Cancer Institute (RO1 CA 95949-01). The project's goal is to develop, implement, assess, and disseminate the next generation of cross-platform, visually-enabled geospatial analysis methods and tools to support cancer-related public health research and policy. The primary objective of the work is to develop a coordinated visual, statistical, and computational approach that extends current abilities to explore, identify, investigate, and explain spatial patterns of cancer incidence and mortality, and their relationships to population demographics and health policy. Of special note are new mechanisms to assess the potential for errors of omission and commission in that analysis.

The proposed methods and tools will facilitate the integration of epidemiological, demographic, and health-policy data, enabling researchers and analysts to take a holistic view of communities, their health with respect to cancer, and relationships to health policy (e.g. screening, accessibility). A series of proof-of-concept case studies will be used to demonstrate and assess the methods and tools developed and, at the same time, to address specific cancer research questions relevant to the Appalachia Cancer Network (ACN). Formal usability assessment methods will be applied throughout the human-centered process of software design, implementation, and deployment. The goal of these assessments will be to ensure that the methods and tools developed are both accessible to and useable by the cancer researchers and analysts whose work they are intended to support.

The project will take full advantage of outreach efforts within the ACN and the Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science (CSISS), to disseminate software developed and to provide training in its use to the cancer research and policy communities within Appalachia and beyond.


More information about OpenSpace Java Tools.

Luc Anselin et al. (2006). Rate Transformations and Smoothing, revised January 2006.


 Last updated January 6, 2006