Background: Torsten Hägerstrand: Time Geography. by John Corbett
Background: Torsten Hägerstrand: Time Geography. by John Corbett
Background: Torsten Hägerstrand: Time Geography. by John Corbett
By John Corbett
Back to Classics
Background
As late as the 1960s, there were no accepted models linking the spatial and
temporal capacities and restraints on individual behavior. Torsten Hägerstrand,
professor in the Department of Social and Economic Geography at Sweden's
Lund University, had studied human migration in the 1960s. In August 1969, he
presented a paper to the European Congress of the Regional Science
Association in Copenhagen, Denmark. Although the paper was ostensibly an
argument for regional scientists to address the individual human element in their
aggregate models, at the heart of it was the need to examine the spatial and
temporal coordinates of human activity. The spatial-temporal model that he
unveiled was destined to change the course of history in the social sciences.
Innovation Historically, social scientists studying the effects of space on human behavior
tended to treat time as an external factor, something that is relevant to
understanding a given phenomenon, but not essential. Activity choices were seen
being made in the context of distance alone, such as with the gravity model, and
often these decisions were seen in an aggregate sense, with individual decisions
viewed as minor variations of those of larger zonal-based groups.
Along with using the individual human as the unit of study, Hägerstrand also
emphasized the importance of time in human activity. "Time has a critical
importance when it comes to fitting people and things together for functioning in
socio-economic systems," he noted. Hence, a given location may be near an
individual, but if a person cannot allocate enough time to travel to it, spatial
proximity alone will not be enough to allow the person to visit it.
Hägerstrand used the space-time path to demonstrate how human spatial activity
is often governed by limitations, and not by independent decisions by spatially or
temporally autonomous individuals. He identified three categories of limitations,
or "constraints": capability, coupling, and authority. Capability constraints refer to
the limitations on human movement due to physical or biological factors. Thus, for
example, a person cannot be in two places at one time. A person also cannot
travel instantaneously from one location to another, which means that a certain
tradeoff must be made between space and time. Those with access to cars and
bullet trains have a spatial-temporal advantage over those who are limited to their
feet or bicycles for transportation. A coupling constraint refers to the need to be in
one particular place for a given length of time, often in interaction with other
people. This coincidence of space-time paths is described (in an electrician's
jargon) as "bundled" paths in a station's tube. In other words, your space-time
path must temporarily link up with those of certain other people to accomplish a
particular task. This could mean anything from visiting the supermarket to going
to work for the day. Lastly, an authority constraint is an area (or "domain") that is
controlled by certain people or institutions that set limits on its access to particular
individuals or groups. For example, a person's space-time path is normally not
permitted to enter a sensitive military base or private club.
A space-time path represents the path taken by an individual, but any one path is
only one of many that can actually be taken by a person in a given amount of
time. A space-time "prism" is the set of all points that can be reached by an
individual given a maximum possible speed from a starting point in space-time
and an ending point in space-time. For example, if a man has to leave home at
11:00 a.m. and return home by 1:00 p.m., and he can travel at a maximum of 50
miles per hour, a point 50 miles away would be unreachable by 11:30 a.m. (hence
outside of his prism). He could arrive at that point at noon, but would have no
time to stay, since he was exactly on the outermost extent of the prism, and
would have to immediately turn back. However, if he traveled at 100 miles per
hour, the prism's boundaries would widen, and the point would easily be
reachable by 11:30 a.m. Instead of having to immediately turn back, he could stay
at that station for a full hour before leaving, amounting to a significant savings of
time. In essence, the physical life-paths that we can take are controlled by the
constraints in each of our space-time prisms, known more precisely as "potential
path spaces," or PPSs.
Over thirty years after it was first introduced, Hägerstrand's space-time model
continues to provide new ways of understanding human activity in space, and
promises novel solutions for solving difficult issues of transportation and access
in modern society.
"Space, time and human conditions." Dynamic allocation of urban space, ed. A.
Karlqvist et. al. (Lexington: Saxon House Lexington Book, 1975).
Pred, A., ed. Space and time in geography: Essays dedicated to Torsten
Hagestrand. (Lund: Gleerup, 1981).