CORD-19:06559dd625491d6474ee88f08c12fc17c1830995 / 12935-13337 JSONTXT

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    CORD-19_Custom_license_subset

    {"project":"CORD-19_Custom_license_subset","denotations":[{"id":"T67","span":{"begin":0,"end":402},"obj":"Sentence"}],"text":"Rushton suggests that GIS provide the capability to perform two types of spatial analysis that could not be performed without GIS: finding areas of high disease incidence that can be labelled as statistically significant and worthy of further investigation, and examining the spatial relationship between disease incidence and information that is geo-referenced differently from the disease data [14] ."}

    CORD-19-Sentences

    {"project":"CORD-19-Sentences","denotations":[{"id":"TextSentencer_T67","span":{"begin":0,"end":402},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T60592","span":{"begin":0,"end":402},"obj":"Sentence"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"http://pubannotation.org/ontology/tao.owl#"}],"text":"Rushton suggests that GIS provide the capability to perform two types of spatial analysis that could not be performed without GIS: finding areas of high disease incidence that can be labelled as statistically significant and worthy of further investigation, and examining the spatial relationship between disease incidence and information that is geo-referenced differently from the disease data [14] ."}

    Epistemic_Statements

    {"project":"Epistemic_Statements","denotations":[{"id":"T25","span":{"begin":0,"end":402},"obj":"Epistemic_statement"}],"text":"Rushton suggests that GIS provide the capability to perform two types of spatial analysis that could not be performed without GIS: finding areas of high disease incidence that can be labelled as statistically significant and worthy of further investigation, and examining the spatial relationship between disease incidence and information that is geo-referenced differently from the disease data [14] ."}