Space-time analytics of human physiology for urban planning
Recent advancements in mobile sensing and wearable technologies create new opportunities to improve our understanding of how people experience their environment. This understanding can inform urban design decisions. Currently, an important urban design issue is the adaptation of infrastructure to in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Computers, environment and urban systems environment and urban systems, 2021-01, Vol.85, p.101554, Article 101554 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent advancements in mobile sensing and wearable technologies create new opportunities to improve our understanding of how people experience their environment. This understanding can inform urban design decisions. Currently, an important urban design issue is the adaptation of infrastructure to increasing cycle and e-bike use. Using data collected from 12 cyclists on a cycle highway between two municipalities in The Netherlands, we coupled location and wearable emotion data at a high spatiotemporal resolution to model and examine relationships between cyclists' emotional arousal (operationalized as skin conductance responses) and visual stimuli from the environment (operationalized as extent of visible land cover type). We specifically took a within-participants multilevel modeling approach to determine relationships between different types of viewable land cover area and emotional arousal, while controlling for speed, direction, distance to roads, and directional change. Surprisingly, our model suggests ride segments with views of larger natural, recreational, agricultural, and forested areas were more emotionally arousing for participants. Conversely, segments with views of larger developed areas were less arousing. The presented methodological framework, spatial-emotional analyses, and findings from multilevel modeling provide new opportunities for spatial, data-driven approaches to portable sensing and urban planning research. Furthermore, our findings have implications for design of infrastructure to optimize cycling experiences.
•Combining location and wearable emotion data can inform urban design decisions.•Wearable measurement of emotional arousal is possible during cycling.•Using visual stimuli derived from viewsheds provides more accurate environment interaction metrics.•Develop web-based mapping system to explore complex human physiology data across urban landscapes. |
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ISSN: | 0198-9715 1873-7587 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.compenvurbsys.2020.101554 |