MFworks Tutorial – 02 Network Modelling

The key to producing a successful network model is in understanding the relationship between the characteristics of physical network systems and the representation of those characteristics by the elements of the network model. The efficacy and validity of the network depends on how precisely the network can be modeled to match the real world network it represents. A network can be explicitly modeled in vector GIS, but can only be approximated by a raster GIS like MFworks.

Network representation in vector GIS: Nodes (numbers) and arcs (letters)

A network in vector GIS takes the form of edges (or arcs) connecting pairs of nodes (or vertices). Nodes can be junctions and edges can be segments of a road. For a network to function as a real-world model, an edge will have to be associated with a direction and with a measure of impedance, determining the resistance or travel cost along the network.



Even if it does not appear so explicitly, a grid made up of cells in a raster GIS is in fact a graph representing a network, with 8 possible directions from each node. However, the grid cells only approximate the exact shapes of the lines in the network. Also, the direction is not as explicitly given as in the vector model. Thirdly, the line and node attributes must be stored as a separate layer for each attribute. As a result, a network using a raster model normally consists of a vast number of layers. Since the grid has a given resolution, the cells will only approximate the exact length of the network.

Tracing a path from cell to cell in raster GIS
generates a zigzag path instead of a straight line.

Using Tomlin’s Incremental Length, Incremental Linkage, and Directional Identifiers, which identify underlying linear features, MFworks makes it possible to model a road network in raster GIS in much the same manner as in vector GIS. The first step is to extract linear features from neighboring raster cells; the second step is to assign directions.

MFworks – step by step

Posted in mfworks
Tags: ,

ARTICLES and PAPERS
Avoid Supply Chain Breakdown - Tailored Risk Management
In my previous post on Ericsson versus Nokia - the now classic case of supply chain disruption I men[...]
From the back room to the board room
Supply chain management used to be relegated to the logistics department of businesses and hardly th[...]
BOOKS and BOOK CHAPTERS
Book Review: Research Methodologies in SCM
Is there something like the right research design for supply chain studies? I believe there is, and [...]
Risk Management Simplified
Risk management. Why make it difficult when you can make it easy? That is perhaps what Andy Osborne [...]
REPORTS and WHITEPAPERS
Vulnerable or valuable supply chain?
More than a year old now, but still holding not so few words of wisdom is the Pricewaterhouse Cooper[...]
ISO 28002 – Supply Chain Resilience
Have you heard of ISO 28002?  No? You should take note of this standard, because the ISO 28000 serie[...]