Richard Milton
University College London
35 Papers
180 Citations
Richard Milton is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neogeography & Web service. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 32 publications.
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Papers
Mapping for the Masses
TL;DR: The authors describe how web 2.0 technologies are helping to define a neogeography that is essentially ‘‘mapping for the masses,’’ while noting that there are many issues of quality, accuracy, copyright, and trust that will influence the impact of these tools on map-based communication.
Scaling and allometry in the building geometries of Greater London
Michael Batty,Rui Carvalho,Andrew Hudson-Smith,Richard Milton,Duncan D. Smith,Philip Steadman +5 more
- 02 Jul 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the scaling properties of individual buildings in a world city were examined using data from the Emporis database, which suggests very strong scaling in world cities and showed that building shape changes according to size.
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Scaling and allometry in the building geometries of Greater London
Michael Batty,Rui Carvalho,Andrew Hudson-Smith,Richard Milton,Duncan D. Smith,Philip Steadman +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the scaling properties of buildings in a world city were investigated using data on the geometric properties of individual buildings, and key allometric relationships between these different properties illustrating how building shape changes according to size.
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Mapping Carbon Monoxide Using GPS Tracked Sensors
Richard Milton,Anthony Steed +1 more
TL;DR: A pilot study to use inexpensive Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers to track the sensors and explore CO variations at a fine geographic scale using mobile carbon monoxide sensors, discussing the results in the context of the push towards large sensor networks and mobile communications.
A new framework for very large-scale urban modelling
Michael Batty,Richard Milton +1 more
TL;DR: An effort to extend traditional land use–transport interaction (LUTI) models to extensive spatial systems so that they are able to track increasingly wide repercussions on the location of population, employment and related distributions of spatial interactions.
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