Why does the perception of street matter? A dimensional analysis of multisensory social and physical attributes shaping the perception of streets

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-4-2021

Abstract

Perception of space is a multifaceted process, where humans may direct their behaviour within the environment through the influence of sensory stimuli, cognitive processing and subjective evaluation. Yet in streets, perceptual studies commonly focus on the physical structure of the environment while undermining the psychological and subjective components that shape the environmental perception. This paper has adopted a perceptual-cognitive approach to construct a multisensory perceptual social and physical model. It addresses visual, auditory, haptic, and olfactory stimuli as well as pedestrians' preference score to extract main components of the street perception. Critical review of the literature, the expert's validation, a pilot study, and the exploratory factor analysis are thoroughly used in this study. Factor analysis extracted eight components associated with perception, including Sociability, Mobility, Convenience, Contentment, Urbanization, Pollution, Safety, and Nature. The results exhibit and discuss the latent correlations between street attributes and perception.

Keywords

Urban street, Built environment, Pedestrians' experience, Perceptual model, Social and physical attributes, Sensory stimuli

Divisions

arts

Funders

University of Malaya Fundamental Research Grant Scheme programme[FP059-2018A (FRGS/1/2018/WAB03/UM/02/3)]

Publication Title

Architectural Science Review

Volume

64

Issue

4, SI

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Ltd

Publisher Location

2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND

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