GeoDaCenter / data-and-lab

For CSDS: sample data, data cleaning, labs and miscellaneous
https://geodacenter.github.io/data-and-lab/
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Add data and metadata from labs 1-9 to Box #2

Open jkoschinsky opened 7 years ago

jkoschinsky commented 7 years ago

Add data and metadata from labs 1-9 to Box using the same format as in the html files from NYC and Nepal data.

jkoschinsky commented 7 years ago

Julie: The lab notes (Lab 3) say that Anselin and Rey's Modern Spatial Econometrics In Practice contains specifics on the variables used in clev_sls_154_core.shp and US counties natregimes.shp.

Unfortunately, I don't have the book and the library copy is checked out. Would you have a copy I can borrow?

Julia: natregimes.shp is basically the same as ncov.shp. This version on the our website has the metadata: https://s3.amazonaws.com/geoda/data/natregimes.zip

Luc will send us the metadata on the cleveland data.

YidanJ-Wu commented 7 years ago

Lab 8: What is the source for liq_chicago.shp? I couldn't find that one in either the lab notes or the Center for Spatial Data Science website.

Lab 7: I found a link to the primary source, for part of the Chicago data (public health indicators). The neighborhood demographics are from the 2014 American Community Survey. I could not find a link to the neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown on the US Census website, so I used one from another website that cited the ACS. http://www.cmap.illinois.gov/data/metropulse/community-snapshots

Lab 4: The source for Walnut Hills crime data was not given in the lab notes, nor was it on the CSDS website. The City of Cincinnati data portal has a table of all individual crime reports going back to 2001, but doesn't tally the number of crimes in each census block. Should I go ahead and cite that?

lanselin commented 7 years ago

For lab 8: On the point pattern data for Chicago, see the lab notes We will use a data set with the locations of 149 grocery stores in Chicago (this data was scraped from Google Maps in 2015 and is only for illustrative purposes)

The liquor store locations are obtained in the same way.

For lab 7: Check with Marynia for the exact source.

For lab 4: The Walnut Hills data set is from · Grubesic, T, R. Wei and A. Murray (2014). Spatial clustering overview and comparison: accuracy, sensitivity and computational expense. Annals, Association of American Geographers 104, 1134-1156.

That should suffice as the source. The data are described in that paper. L.

On Jan 15, 2017, at 12:56 PM, YidanJ-Wu notifications@github.com wrote:

Lab 8: What is the source for liq_chicago.shp? I couldn't find that one in either the lab notes or the Center for Spatial Data Science website.

Lab 7: I found a link to the primary source, for part of the Chicago data (public health indicators). The neighborhood demographics are from the 2014 American Community Survey. I could not find a link to the neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown on the US Census website, so I used one from another website that cited the ACS.

Lab 4: The source for Walnut Hills crime data was not given in the lab notes, nor was it on the CSDS website. The City of Cincinnati data portal has a table of all individual crime reports going back to 2001, but doesn't tally the number of crimes in each census block. Should I go ahead and cite that?

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