Evolving Thematic Map Design in Academic Cartography: A Thirty-Year Study Based on Multilingual Journals
Zhiwei Wei, Chenxi Song, Tazhu Wang, Fan Wu, Hua Liao + 2 more
TLDR
This study analyzes 30 years of thematic map design in academic cartography, finding institutional convergence over cultural divergence.
Key contributions
- Analyzed 23,928 maps from 45,732 articles across 16 Chinese and English journals (1990-2020).
- Quantified map design across elements, color, and layout, revealing shared structural conventions.
- Found both language groups use restrained colors, neutral hues, and centered layouts with high main-map occupation.
- Identified parallel evolutionary trends: increasing element richness, legend usage, and hue diversity over time.
Why it matters
This paper provides the first large-scale empirical study of thematic map design evolution in academic cartography. Its findings highlight institutional convergence, offering valuable insights for cartographic standards and future design practices across cultures.
Original Abstract
Thematic maps play a central role in academic communication, yet their large-scale design evolution has rarely been examined empirically. This study presents a longitudinal and multilingual analysis of thematic map design practices in academic cartography from 1990 to 2020. We compile a corpus of 45,732 research articles from sixteen authoritative Chinese- and English-language journals and extract 23,928 maps using computer vision and large-model-based document parsing to build a structured dataset. Map design characteristics are quantified across three dimensions: map elements, color design, and layout structure. Results show that Chinese- and Englishlanguage academic maps share highly similar structural conventions, typically employing restrained color palettes with neutral dominant hues, low saturation, high brightness, and limited hue diversity, as well as centered layouts with high main-map occupation ratios. Differences exist in that English-language maps show slightly greater hue richness and compactness, whereas Chinese-language maps historically rely more on neutral hues and integrated layouts. Temporal analysis reveals parallel evolutionary trends in both groups, including increasing element richness, legend usage, and hue diversity, alongside stable layout structures. Overall, the findings suggest that academic map design evolution is characterized more by institutional convergence than cultural divergence.
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