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Professionally, I have a scholarly interest in Psychometrics, especially: Computerized adaptive testing, Item response theory, Criterion-referenced test, Computerized classification test, and the Sequential probability ratio test.
My non-professional scholarly interest is in the confluence of urban geography, development geography, and economic geography on the topic of site and situation; namely, why is a city founded and why does it grow? Is it:
- water power (Minneapolis, MN and Watertown, WI)
- a more-or-less terminus of navigation (Saint Paul, MN and Duluth, MN)
- a natural harbor (Milwaukee, WI as well as many supercities like New York, Hong Kong, and the San Francisco area)
- a canal entrance (Cincinatti, OH, Chicago, IL and Buffalo, NY - technically, Tonowanda)
- a handy stop or port on a river (New Orleans, LA and Memphis, TN)
- a geological resource (Minnesota's Iron Range and mining towns everywhere)
- railroads (Omaha, NE and Atlanta, GA)
- tactical defensibility (Tyre, Lebanon and Athens)
- public purposes such as a capital or university (Madison, WI, Jackson, MS, Columbus, OH, State College, PA)
- proximity to other cities with these characteristics (e.g., a pure suburb like Woodbury, Minnesota)
- additional factors such as soil quality, climate, economic booms and depressions, etc.
Pages needing a lot of help
Alfred Binet, Industrial and organizational psychology, aptitude, references on item response theory, Fox River
The Working Man's Barnstar | ||
I hereby award you this barnstar for all the work you are doing on towns and counties in Minnesota. The quality and quantity is admirable.--Appraiser (talk) 14:53, 8 February 2008 (UTC) |