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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/11/2013 in all areas

  1. 1 point
  2. PhD Studentship: Geographically Weighted Geodemographics [university of Liverpool, UK] Supervisors: Dr Alex Singleton; Professor Chris Brunsdon Industrial Partner: Office for National Statistics Applicants are invited for a PhD studentship at the University of Liverpool within the ESRC North West DTC. The studentship will be supervised by Dr Alex Singleton and Professor Chris Brunsdon in the Department of Geography and Planning; and is being conducted in collaboration with the Office for National Statistics. This three year advanced quantitative methods award will provide an enhanced stipend of £16,726 (tax free) alongside payment of tuition fees. You will also have the opportunity to apply for additional funding related to training and fieldwork expenses. This studentship is open to candidates from outside of the UK / EU. The project aims to redefine those methods through which geodemographic classifications are created, feeding these developments into ONS best practice for creating future open national indicators, such as the census Output Area Classification. The project will develop an extension to traditional geodemographics that more appropriately accounts for spatial context and the relationship between small area geography. This will involve the development of new methods integrating spatial statistics, data mining and computer modelling. The candidate will require a background in Geography, Planning, Mathematics, Computer Science, Statistics or other quantitative discipline; an undergraduate degree at 2.1 or 1, and ideally a Masters degree in a domain relevant area. We would be especially interested in candidates with some coding experience, either in traditional languages (java, python etc) or statistical programming such as R. If you are interested and would like some more information, we have a more detailed specification of the project available here:http://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/881843/Further_Details_PhD.pdf Also, please feel free to get in touch with Alex Singleton ([email protected]). Candidates interested in this studentship should send a letter detailing their suitability and interest in the project, along with a CV, to Alex Singleton by 27th September 2013.
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  4. 1) load the shapefile over the raster. (the shapefile and the raster image must be in the same coordinate sistem). 2) select the shapefile, go to copy and then paste > you will make an AOI from the shapefile boundary 3) select the AOI (it will turn to yellow colour) 4) go to Raster tab > Subset & Chip > Create Subset Image. (to clip the raster using the AOI you must press the "AOI" button > from View). 5) insert the name of your clipped raster and press OK > now you have a subset raster using the shape file (AOI) boundary Finish. IF YOU HAVE PROBLEMS and you don't understand my steps, go and search on Google or go to ERDAS forum.
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