Michael Leitner

Michael Leitner, Ph.D is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University (LSU) in Baton Rouge. He received his undergraduate (1987) and graduate (1990) degrees in geography and cartography at the University of Vienna, Austria followed by his doctoral degree in GIS and Computer Cartography in the Department of Geography at the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1997. His research interests fall into the area of Geographic Information Science and Technology (GI S&T) applied to criminology, medical geography, and cartographic visualization. He has taught primarily GI S&T courses including computer cartography, map design, GIS, GPS, aerial photo interpretation and spatial analysis. Dr. Leitner is the current chair of the Cartography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers and a member of the Editorial Board of Cartographic Perspectives and Cartography and Geographic Information Science.

Publications

Geographic Information Systems and Public Health: Eliminating Perinatal Disparity
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 317 pages.
Geographic Information Systems and Public Health: Eliminating Perinatal Disparity is designed to introduce a community health group to the potential of using a Geographic...
Explaining the Geography of Infant Health
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 20 pages.
During a seminar presentation to the Geography and Anthropology Faculty at Louisiana State University, a series of summary statistics were presented concerning the racial...
An Introduction to GIS (All Things Data)
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 31 pages.
One of the purposes of this book is to introduce community health groups to the potential of GIS, a technology that can help in understanding the spatial landscape of prenatal...
An Introduction to GIS (All Things Spatial)
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 27 pages.
The last chapter provided an introduction to two of the key components in a GIS: getting the data in, and then manipulating them to answer questions. This chapter considers how...
The Geography of Health Risks
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 67 pages.
This book has so far provided an introduction to GIS in terms of its use as part of a community health program. Subsequent chapters will describe a selection of more detailed GIS...
GIS and Spatial Analysis: Keeping It Simple
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 28 pages.
n the opening chapters, GIS was broken into four general components, one of which was the spatial analysis of data. This is probably the least utilized of all GIS functions...
Advanced Spatial Analysis
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 29 pages.
The last chapter presented several ideas of how to perform relatively simple forms of spatial analysis. Many of these approaches, though insightful, have been superceded by more...
Spatial/Temporal Stability in Neighborhoods of Risk: The Mobility of Mothers
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 21 pages.
Four years have been spent analyzing infant health data for Baton Rouge. As with working with any dataset, one gets a feel for the data. One such feeling was that the population...
Patient Confidentiality
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 21 pages.
Different governmental agencies have long stored information in restricted-access databases. The advent of online data entry and analysis, and subsequent distribution of data to...
Creating the Baton Rouge Healthy Start GIS
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 23 pages.
I recently gave a presentation to an Introduction to Gender and Minority Studies class at Louisiana State University. This was an interesting experience, as most of my talks tend...
Bioterrorism, Pregnancy, and Old White Men
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner. © 2006. 19 pages.
By the title you might think this chapter is a departure from the general theme of this book. I beg your indulgence as I plead my case, because pregnant women as a cohort have...
Using Hierarchical Nearest Neighbor Analysis and Animation to Investigate the Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Raccoon Rabies in West Virginia
Andrew Curtis, Michael Leitner, Cathleen Hanlon. © 2003. 17 pages.
One of the most powerful uses of GIS in the field of public health is as an exploratory data analysis tool. By combining the three post-input defining components of a GIS (data...