This lab is designed to introduce you to some tools that you may need as you proceed through the modules of our course, as well as to get you started collecting data that we will need for practice purposes. We want you to get organized and be efficient, and these tools are provided to help you do just that.
If possible, pair up for this exercise: two heads are better than one, and more likely to find that silly mistake. Each of you should work on your own computer, but at least you'll have a shoulder to cry on.
By the end of this lab you should have
Wow! All that in 2 hours? We'd better get going. Follow the links....
Students at U of M will need a UNIX account: we will be using space in that account to create the home page. You may have one already, and not know it. If you have the icon "My IFS Home Directory" on the desktop, or if you can logon to a UNIX machine (e.g. login.itd.umich.edu), then you're okay. If not, contact Andy to arrange for an account, and create a local directory for the rest of this lab.
The IFS UNIX file account at the U of M is accessible from the desktop of your Windows machine once you login, and its files and directories can be treated just like the other files and directories under Windows.
Web intro: Your course home page.
We're going to collect two data sets.
Explain your methods for attaining the extremes to your partner. Replace the matrix generated by the machine with one of your own, which shows extreme spatial autocorrelation. You might want to print off a copy of the extreme cases, so you'll remember them.
Page by Andy Long. Comments appreciated.
aelon@sph.umich.edu