1. CERTAIN ASPECTS OF THE EXPANSION OF QUANTITATIVE METHODOLOGY IN AMERICAN GEOGRAPHY
2. RELATIONS BETWEEN TWO SETS OF VARIATES
3. King, L. J. 1969.Statistical Analysis in Geography, 217–222. New York: Prentice-Hall. and D. J. Phillip and S. Gibson, “Simple, Multiple and Canonical Correlation,”Inquiry, Vol. 7 (1970), pp. 55–59. Furthermore, standard computer programs for canonical correlation do not perform these calculations; see, for example, P. J. Lee, “FORTRAN IV Programs for Canonical Correlation and Canonical Trend-Surface Analysis,”Computer Contributions, Kansas Geological Survey, No. 32 (1969). On the other hand, both canonical loadings and canonical scores are used in D. M. Ray, “From Factorial to Canonical Ecology: The Spatial Interrelationships of Economic and Cultural Differences in Canada,”Economic Geography, Vol. 47, (1971), pp. 344–355