TY - JOUR N2 - Population density varies sharply from place to place on the whole territory of Poland. The largest number of people per 1 km2 is 21,531, while uninhabited areas account for about 48% of the country. Such uneven, non-Gaussian distribution of the data causes some difficulty in choosing the classification method in geometric choropleth maps. A thorough evaluation of a geometric choropleth map of population data is not possible using only traditional indicators such as the Tabular Accuracy Index (TAI). That is why the aim of the article is to develop an innovative index based on distance analysis and neighbour analysis of grid cells. Two indexes have been suggested in this paper: the Spatial Distance Index (SDI) and the Spatial Contiguity Index (SCI). The paper discusses the use of five classification methods to evaluate choropleth maps of population data, like head-tail breaks, natural breaks, equal intervals, quantile, and geometrical intervals. A comprehensive assessment of such geometric choropleth maps is also done. The research was conducted for the whole territory of Poland, using data from the 2011 National Census of Population and Housing. Population data are presented in the 1km grid. The results of the analysis are shown on thematic maps. A compatibility of the choropleth maps with urban-rural typology of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) was also checked. L1 - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/103272/PDF/art02.pdf L2 - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/103272 PY - 2018 IS - No 1 KW - data classification KW - choropleth map KW - neighbourhood analysis KW - spatial contiguityanalysis KW - head-tail breaks method A1 - Całka, Beata PB - Commitee on Geodesy PAS VL - vol. 67 DA - 2018.06.15 T1 - Comparing continuity and compactness of choropleth map classes UR - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/dlibra/publication/edition/103272 T2 - Geodesy and Cartography ER -