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  2. Spatiotemporal pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatiotemporal_pattern

    Spatiotemporal patterns are patterns that occur in a wide range of natural phenoma and are characterized by a spatial and temporal patterning. The general rules of pattern formation hold. In contrast to "static", pure spatial patterns, the full complexity of spatiotemporal patterns can only be recognized over time.

  3. Spatiotemporal gene expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatiotemporal_gene_expression

    Spatiotemporal variation plays a key role in generating the diversity of cell types found in developed organisms; since the identity of a cell is specified by the collection of genes actively expressed within that cell, if gene expression was uniform spatially and temporally, there could be at most one kind of cell.

  4. Spatiotemporal database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatiotemporal_database

    A spatiotemporal database embodies spatial, temporal, and spatiotemporal database concepts, and captures spatial and temporal aspects of data and deals with: Geometry changing over time and/or Location of objects moving over invariant geometry (known variously as moving objects databases [ 1 ] or real-time locating systems ).

  5. Time geography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_geography

    Time geography or time-space geography is an evolving transdisciplinary perspective on spatial and temporal processes and events such as social interaction, ecological interaction, social and environmental change, and biographies of individuals. [1]

  6. Spatial analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_analysis

    Spatial dependency is the co-variation of properties within geographic space: characteristics at proximal locations appear to be correlated, either positively or negatively. [33] Spatial dependency leads to the spatial autocorrelation problem in statistics since, like temporal autocorrelation, this violates standard statistical techniques that ...

  7. Spectro-temporal receptive field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectro-temporal_receptive...

    The spectro-temporal receptive field or spatio-temporal receptive field (STRF) of a neuron represents which types of stimuli excite or inhibit that neuron. [1] " Spectro-temporal" refers most commonly to audition, where the neuron's response depends on frequency versus time, while "spatio-temporal" refers to vision, where the neuron's response depends on spatial location versus time.

  8. Spacetime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacetime

    Because of the invariance of the spacetime interval spanned by these two events, and the nonzero spatial separation d in S, the temporal distance in S′ must be smaller than the one in S: the smaller temporal distance between the two events, resulting from the readings of the moving clock W′, belongs to the slower running clock W′.

  9. Coverage data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coverage_data

    A coverage is the digital representation of some spatio-temporal phenomenon.ISO 19123 provides the definition: [a] feature that acts as a function to return values from its range for any direct position within its spatial, temporal or spatiotemporal domain