Freshly minted Regents' Professor plumbs geospatial data to make sense of the world


Stewart Fotheringham

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You could say Stewart Fotheringham is where he is now because of a dogged preoccupation with that perennial question of the human condition: Why?

“When I look at a map of disease rates across the country, for example, and I see there are clusters of high rates over here and low rates over here, what I want to know is why? What's causing that?” he said.

In pursuit of an answer, the Yorkshire, England, native has studied or taught at universities across the U.K. and in North America, from Canada to Florida and New York to Indiana.

His quest eventually brought him to Arizona State University’s School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning, where he was recently named a Regents’ ProfessorRegents’ Professors are considered the elite of the academic world, making up no more than 3 percent of all faculty at ASU. To be awarded the distinction, scholars must be full professors, with outstanding achievements in their fields, who are nationally and internationally recognized by their peers. for his scholarship in the field of spatial data analysis.

The phrase “big data” is now ubiquitous as a catchall for the vast amounts of information being generated by technology users on a day-to-day basis — from traffic trends recorded by GPS to spending habits recorded by credit card companies — and it’s people like Fotheringham who try to make sense out of it so that it can be used in a meaningful way.

In particular, Fotheringham looks at how that data is connected to location.

“My work is all about trying to understand the real world, essentially, and why there are variations in what we see,” he said.

FotheringhamFotheringham is also a Distinguished Sustainability Scientist in the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability. came to ASU in 2014 from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Founded in 1412, St. Andrews is extremely selective, with roughly 5,000 undergraduates and 2,000 graduate students, and what Fotheringham described as a more traditional “siloed mentality” concerning departments that sometimes engendered tension and rivalry.

“I prefer the ASU style of things,” he said. “Everybody talks about it, and it’s true: The schools are so open, and you're encouraged to talk to people outside your own department. So the opportunities are fantastic but also the atmosphere. It’s extremely collegial; everybody gets along well and everybody's pulling in the same direction. When you have success here, everybody genuinely is pleased because you’ve done something for the school and the university. So I think the atmosphere is much, much more conducive to getting on and being a success.”

Some of the “why questions” Fotheringham is currently addressing with his analytical models include spatial variations in disease rates and voting behavior.

In Scotland, colon and breast cancer screenings are free services, but rates of people who actually take advantage of them range from 80 to 90 percent in some areas to about 20 percent in others.

“That's a good example of how my models can help,” Fotheringham said. “Because if we can identify what factors are affecting screening take-up locally, then we can target people based on those factors, whether it’s a religious thing, an age thing, an educational thing or something else.”

From there, suggestions can be made for location-specific messaging around cancer screenings that is more likely to motivate a certain population than a blanket strategy that assumes everyone will respond to the same message.

The same is true for politics. Currently, Fotheringham is analyzing the voting behavior in the 2016 U.S. presidential election using a brand-new statistical methodology.

Typically, analytical models are static in that they assume an outcome such as voting behavior is based only on a single factor, such as age or income level.

“That just gives you an average across the whole country,” Fotheringham explained. “What we don't know is whether that is true for every location within the country.

“It’s a bit like looking through a microscope. Suppose you’re looking through a microscope and had the focus wrong and you just saw a blur. That's what we were getting before (with static models). But suppose you can focus in on the microscopes and see with increasing clarity what's there. That's what my models do.”

When it comes to teaching students, Fotheringham’s favorite part is the look of recognition when they grasp such a concept. For him, those are rock star moments.

“When you have a good lecture, you're on a high,” he said. “When you see students getting pleasure out of learning and having their eyes opened and just getting excited about it, that's a fantastic feeling. I can appreciate how musicians or comedians feel when they've had a good gig or played to a really good crowd. It's a bit like that, on a smaller scale.”

And he fully embraces the ASU philosophy that education should be accessible to all.

“It's quite different from the U.K. — and actually, in this country it's true as well — where, if you've got money, you're much more likely to go to university,” Fotheringham said. “But I think intelligence is not concentrated by wealth, necessarily. So I think what ASU is doing in that regard is splendid, really. It is challenging, but I think it's worth doing.”

Next on the docket for Fotheringham is an ambitious project that broadens his voting-behavior analyses beyond the 2016 election, going back several years to determine what caused voting behavior in the U.S. to shift over time to the point where Americans are more divided than ever before.

“Clearly in this country, we're becoming more partisan because of politics,” he said. “The differences between Republicans and Democrats are becoming stronger, and the middle ground is disappearing. I can actually map that, and I can do that through time with each presidential election, to see when and where changes occur, in terms of the effect of location on how we vote.

“I'm desperate to do that; I just need the time.”

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