BattyMLongleyPA (1994) Fractal Cities: A Geometry of Form and Function. London: Academic Press.
2.
BattyMXieY (1997) Possible urban automata. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 175–192.
3.
BattyMCouclelisHEichenM (1997) Urban systems as cellular automata. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 159–164.
4.
BenatiS (1997) A cellular automaton for the simulation of competitive location. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 205–218.
5.
ClarkeKCHoppenSGaydosLJ (1997) A self-modifying cellular automaton model of historical urbanization in the San Francisco Bay area. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 247–262.
6.
CouclelisH (1997) From cellular automata to urban models: new principles for model development and implementation. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 165–174.
7.
GleickJ (1987) Chaos: Making a New Science. New York, USA: Viking Penguin.
8.
JacobsJ (1961) The Death and Life of Great American Cities. New York, USA: Random House.
9.
LevyS (1992) Artificial Life: The Quest for a New Creation. New York: Pantheon Books.
10.
O’SullivanD (2024) Computing Geographically: Bridging Giscience and Geography. New York: Guilford Press.
11.
PhippsMLangloisA (1997) Spatial dynamics, cellular automata, and parallel processing computers. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 193–204.
12.
PortugaliJBenensonIOmerI (1997) Spatial cognitive dissonance and sociospatial emergence in a self-organizing city. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 263–285.
13.
SandersLPumainDMathianH, et al. (1997) SIMPOP: a multiagent system for the study of urbanism. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 287–305.
14.
ScottJC (1998) Seeing like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. New Haven: Yale University Press.
15.
WagnerDF (1997) Cellular automata and geographic information systems. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 219–234.
16.
WhiteREngelenG (1997) Cellular automata as the basis of integrated dynamic regional modelling. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design24(2): 235–246.