3) Maximum R-Squared
===Image Analysis=== ====Building Images====
Use B&W:
*Text Elements: http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/10.3/analyze/arcpy-mapping/textelement-class.htm
*Data access module: http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/10.3/analyze/arcpy-data-access/what-is-the-data-access-module-.htm
====Analyzing the results====
The following issues became apparent (Counts out of 191 cities with 4 or more locations in 2017 and greater than $10m inv in a year over all time):
#Encapsulation - A small number of place boundaries are fully encapsulated inside of other geoplaces. We need to determine when this happens. The initial list includes Addison, Culver City, Santa Monica (might be extreme adjacency), and others. We need a query to work this out.
#Concavity (6 marked) - Some place boundaries are fairly extremely concave (for instance, Fort Lauderdale, FL, Birmingham, AL, Boulder, CO). This in itself isn't too much of an (addressable) issue. However, a small number of places have concavity and adjacency issues, which together lead to hull overlaps. This is ameriorated by removing outliers, but we should check them (e.g., Cary, NC, Morrisville, NC, the city next to Newark, CA, Roswell, GA)
#Adjacency (23 marked) - The entire of the valley has an adjacency issue (these weren't marked), as do a fairly large number of other cities. See Newport Beach, CA and others. Lexington, MA provides a nice example of containment despite adjacency. As does Cambridge, MA with the right outliers removed.
#Outliers (52 marked) - perhaps as many as 1 in 5 cities had one or two obvious outliers on a visual inspection.
Critical checks:
*Addison, TX: encapsulation
*Culver City, CA: encapsulation
*Oklahoma City, OK: scale issue (one outlier in State House?)
*Portland, ME: scale issue. Though Portland's place boundary contains an island and some sea area, making it very wonky, this isn't an issue.
*San Juan Capistrano, CA: Just 2 locations (1 singleton and 1 multiton) and no hull. Note that we might want to omit this place.
===First Estimation(s)===