Population-Urban Studies

[1] Wong, D. W. S. and A. S. Fotheringham, 1990. Urban systems as examples of bounded chaos: exploring the relationship between fractal dimension, rank-size, and rural-to urban migration. Geografiska Annaler 72 B (2-3): 89-99.

[2] Thaper, N.*, D. W. S. Wong and J. Lee. 1999. Changing geography of the population centroids in theUnited States. Geographical Bulletin 41(1): 45-56.

[3] Fonseca, J. W. and D. W. S. Wong. 2000. Changing patterns of population density in the United States. The Professional Geographer 52(3): 504-517.     

[4] Griffith, D. A. and D. W. Wong. 2007. Modeling population density across major U.S. cities: A polycentric spatial regression approach. Journal of Geographical Systems 9: 53-75.

[5] Li, J.*, D. W. Wong and D. A. Griffith. 2009. Exploring and simulating the regularities in intra-urban population density structure. Annals of GIS 15(1): 11-22.

[6] Owen, K. * and D. W. Wong. 2013. An approach to differentiate informal settlements using spectral, texture, geomorphology and road accessibility metrics. Applied Geography 38:107-118.

[7] Falcone, J. A.* and D. W. Wong. 2013. Mapping urban land uses in the U.S. by census zone using nationally-available data. Land Use Science 8(4): 466.488.

[8] Owen, K.* and D. W. Wong. 2013. Exploring structural differences between rural and urban informal settlements from imagery: The basureros of Cobán. GeoCarto International 28(7): 562-581.

[9] Liao, B. and D. W. Wong. 2015. Changing urban residential patterns of Chinese migrants: A case of Shanghai from 2000 to 2010. Urban Geography 36(1): 109-126.

[10] Wong, D. W., G. Strang,* W-Y. Tang,* and W. Wu.* 2015. How diverse can a “Chinese city” be? A case of Hong Kong. Eurasian Geography and Economics 56(3):  331-355.  DOI: 10.1080/15387216.2015.1091366

[11] Rossiter, K. M.*, D. W. S. Wong, and P. L. Delamater. 2018. Congressional redistricting: keeping communities together? The Professional Geographer (accepted)

[12] Rossiter, K. M.*, and D. W. S. Wong. Congressional districts: how "equal" are they? GeoJournal (accepted)