The human brain is probably the most complex object in the universe, and also one of the least understood. For example, how the brain produces the mind and consciousness is a complete mystery. Nevertheless, the brain is amenable to measurements of various kinds that produce lots of data. It is a spatial object residing in the skull; it is also temporal in the sense that neurons communicate by signals that take traverse the brain network over time. In this paper we ask whether spatio-temporal data analysis can contribute to its understanding. Toward this goal we propose several research directions that are inspired by GIS work. However, these are just examples, and other work on moving objects in space or on networks is applicable.
CITATION STYLE
Wolfson, O. (2018). Understanding the human brain via its spatio-temporal properties. In GIS: Proceedings of the ACM International Symposium on Advances in Geographic Information Systems (pp. 85–88). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3274895.3274931
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