USE OF DENSITY EQUALIZING MAP PROJECTION
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D. W. MERRILL; S. SELVIN; E. R. CLOSE; H. H. HOLMES
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Article
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1996
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John Wiley and Sons
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English
β 710 KB
In studying geographic disease distributions, one normally compares rates among arbitrarily defined geographic subareas (for example, census tracts), thereby sacrificing the geographic detail of the original data. The sparser the data, the larger the subareas must be in order to calculate stable rat