cuesgeographic
Cuesgeographic is a term used in cognitive geography and geovisualization to refer to the study and use of cues that influence geographic understanding, interpretation, and decision-making. The term blends cue with geographic and denotes both the signals present in geographic representations and the mental cues people rely on when navigating and reasoning about space.
Origin and usage: Coined in the early 2010s by researchers exploring how people extract meaning from maps,
Definition and scope: Cuesgeographic covers external cues in maps (color schemes, symbols, legend clarity, spatial scale),
Methods: Research in cuesgeographic commonly employs experiments with eye-tracking and think-aloud protocols; GIS analytics; user studies
Applications: The concept informs map design improvements, navigation aids, disaster response mapping, education, and virtual or
Examples: Studies show pedestrians rely on recognizable landmarks as cue anchors; color ramps in heatmaps can
Relation to other concepts: Cuesgeographic is linked to cognitive geography, spatial cognition, geovisualization, and wayfinding cues,
Critique: Challenges include measuring cue salience across cultures, avoiding overreliance on visual cues, and ensuring comparability