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  1. Jennifer A Miller is Professor of GIScience and Chair of the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas at Austin. She joined the faculty at UT-Austin in 2007 after four years at West Virginia University. Jennifer’s research focuses on the integration of GIScience and biogeography, particularly in the areas of ...

  2. Ph.D., San Diego State University/UC-Santa Barbara. jennifer.miller@austin.utexas.edu. 512-232-1587 (prefer contact through email) RLP 3.718. campus mail code: A3100.

    • jennifer.miller@austin.utexas.edu
    • Professor & Chair
  3. Jennifer A Miller. Janet Franklin (with a contribution by Jennifer A. Miller): Mapping species distributions: Spatial inference and prediction: Cambridge University Press, 2009, 320 pp, Illus …. Double-blind comparison of cetirizine and placebo in the treatment of seasonal rhinitis.

  4. Assistant Professor, Department of Geology and Geography, West Virginia University (20032007). PUBLICATIONS Journal articles (peer-reviewed) P. Holloway, J. Miller (accepted). A quantitative synthesis of the movement concepts used within species distribution modelling. Ecological Modelling. J. Miller, D. O’Sullivan, and N. Wiegand, eds. (2016).

  5. Jennifer Miller's general research interests lie at the confluence of GIScience, spatial analysis, and biogeography. Her specific research focus is in the application area of species distribution modeling (SDM), and much of her previous work has addressed explicitly spatial issues associated with SDM, such as incorporating spatial autocorrelation and representing spatial accuracy and uncertainty.

  6. This paper examines the halo effect and uses geographically weighted regression to explore whether the effect varies spatially. This recent IJGIS paper was a result of two NSF-funded workshops co-organized by Jennifer Miller, Gil Bohrer (OSU), and Harvey Miller (OSU). We highlight emerging themes and commonalities in animal movement and human ...

  7. by Jennifer A Miller and Paul Holloway Movement in the context of species distribution models (SDMs) generally refers to a species' ability to access suitable habitat. Movement ability can be determined by some combination of dispersal constraints or migration rates, landscape...

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