Heuristic Approaches to Spatial Analysis in Archaeology
- 20 January 1982
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 47 (1), 31-63
- https://doi.org/10.2307/280052
Abstract
This article discusses an approach to spatial analysis which is more closely tailored to archaeological objectives and archaeological data than are more "traditional" quantitative techniques such as nearest neighbor analysis. Heuristic methods, methods which make use of the problem context and which are guided in part by intuitively derived "rules," are discussed in general and with reference to the problem of spatial analysis in archaeology. A preliminary implementation of such a method is described and applied to artificial settlement data and artifact distributions from the Magdalenian camp of Pincevent. Finally, the prospects for further development of heuristic methods are elaborated.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- What Does it Mean to Understand Language?Cognitive Science, 1980
- The Hearsay-II Speech-Understanding System: Integrating Knowledge to Resolve UncertaintyACM Computing Surveys, 1980
- Cognitive Science: The Newest Science of the Artificial*Cognitive Science, 1980
- The Nearest-Neighbor Statistic: Archaeological Application and New DevelopmentsAmerican Antiquity, 1979
- Dimensional Analysis of Behavior and Site Structure: Learning from an Eskimo Hunting StandAmerican Antiquity, 1978
- Spatial Analysis: Multiple Procedures in Pattern Recognition StudiesAmerican Antiquity, 1977
- Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and BiasesScience, 1974
- Spatial Analysis of Occupation Floors II: The Application of Nearest Neighbor AnalysisAmerican Antiquity, 1974
- Statistical Tests of Spatial Association in the Locations of Tool TypesAmerican Antiquity, 1973
- ORDER NEIGHBOR STATISTICS FOR A CLASS OF RANDOM PATTERNS IN MULTIDIMENSIONAL SPACEAnnals of the American Association of Geographers, 1963