Places are emergent and self-organizing

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Abstract

In terms of its theme, Issue C1 begins where Issue C2 ends. If linear statistics cannot adequately model the relationship between health outcomes and compositional and contextual factors, how should researchers model communities? According to Issue C3, communities should be modeled as case-based, complex configurations that emerge out of the self-organizing interactions amongst a set of compositional and contextual factors and their related health outcomes.

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Castellani, B., Rajaram, R., Buckwalter, J. G., Ball, M., & Hafferty, F. (2015). Places are emergent and self-organizing. In SpringerBriefs in Public Health (pp. 39–45). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09734-3_6

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