Title: IAED 410 Environmental Psychology
1IAED 410Environmental Psychology
- Asst.Prof.Dr. Deniz Hasirci
- Spring 2009-2010
2Three Orders in Looking at the Environment -
Three Orders - Perception - Gestalt -
Cognition - Cognitive maps
3Three Orders in Looking at the Environment
- Lets be botanists.
- Not florists categorize according to color,
fragrance. - Not farmers rank according to marketability.
- Thus Three Orders
4- PHYSICAL ORDER (FORM)
- TERRITORIAL ORDER (PLACE)
- CULTURAL ORDER (UNDERSTANDING)
5Environmental Perception and Cognition
- Environmental Perception
- Gestalt
- Environmental Cognition
- (operational)
- Cognitive Maps
- Wayfinding
61. Environmental Perception
- Process for gathering information about the world
(source of affective responses). - OBJECT PERCEPTION
- Simple stimuli
- Brightness
- Color
- Depth
- Perceptual constancy
- Form
- Movement
7- Perception-in-action
- Perceiver is part of the scene.
- Moving involves multiple perspectives.
- Perceiver is connected by clear goal.
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9- Gestalt Psychology
- The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
- Laws of organization (how the brain operates)
- Gestalt form, unified whole,
configuration. - Gestalt psychologists developed five laws that
govern human perception
10 11 12- 3. Law of Good Continuation
13 14- 5. Law of Prägnanz (good form)
15 162. Environmental Cognition
- The process of thought that leads to knowing
- The psychological result of perception, learning,
recognizing, reasoning. - Refers to the mental functions and processes
(thoughts). - How we acquire, store, organize, recall
information about locations, distances, and
arrangements in spaces. - http//www.vimeo.com/404183
- http//vimeo.com/7284425
17What is your image of the city?
Kevin Lynchs Image of the City
- How might our understanding of how people develop
mental images of the environment help us design
spaces better fitted to users needs? - Environmental cognition can contribute to
practical environmental design.
18Why Legibility?
- Aids navigation
- Guides social interaction
- Prevents feeling lost
- Helps make the environment feel like home
- Some environments are more legible than others
19Features of Cognitive Maps
- Lynch (1960)
- Five important elements (of legibility) in mental
maps of cities - Path distinctive thread that gives direction.
- Edge the boundary between two areas.
- Node important pathways come together,
activity. - District medium/large area with a common
identity. - Landmark reference point that stands out due to
shape, height, color, or historic importance.
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26 27LAST WEEKEnvironmental Perception and Cognition
- Environmental Perception
- Gestalt
- Environmental Cognition
- (operational)
- Cognitive Maps
- Legibility
- Wayfinding
28Wayfinding
- Wayfinding an internal psychological process,
sequence of problem-solving activities. - The process by which we navigate in our
environment. - Newcomers to an environment experience the
stressful feeling of being lost ? learned
process.
29- Effects of Signage and Floor Plan Configuration
on Wayfinding Accuracy (Environment and
Behavior, Vol. 23, No. 5, 553-574 (1991). - Michael J. O'Neill Interior Environments Pgm,
Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison - This study examines the influence of floor plan
complexity and several types of signage on
wayfinding within a series of buildings on a
university campus. The study used a 5 x 3
factorial experimental design. - The first factor, complexity of floor plan
configuration, is defined through five
alternatives. The second factor, signage, has
three conditions no signage, textual signage, or
graphic signage. - The results show that as floor plan complexity
increases, wayfinding performance decreases.
Graphic signage produced the greatest rate of
travel in all settings, but textual signage was
the most effective in reducing wayfinding errors,
such as wrong turns and backtracking. Overall,
the addition of signage resulted in a 13
increase in rate of travel, a 50 decrease in
wrong turns, and a 62 decrease in backtracking
across the five settings. However, plan
configuration was found to exert a significant
influence regardless of signage, because the
wayfinding performance of participants with
access to signage in the most complex settings
remained equivalent to, or significantly poorer
than, those in the simplest settings with no
signage. - EDRA, INFORMAWORLD, DESIGN SHARE, NSCU-UD
30THIS WEEK
- 1. Perceiving Configurations
- Live Configurations
- Control vs. Ownership
- Control Games
- Overlap of Form and Territory
- 2. Basic Theories of Environment and Behavior
31- Does control mean ownership?
- Borrowed furniture, equipment, spaces?
- Environmental game
- Watch the game
- Observe live configurations
- Deduce rules
- Not to ask agents what, but why and how.
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33- Public Spaces Overlap of Form and Territory
- Manipulation of public space
- Claiming territory through use of space
34- Zaha Hadid Burnham Pavilion, Chicago
- http//vimeo.com/6937796
- http//vimeo.com/6937292
35Ethics/Values and Attitudes
- Ethics/Values
- Attitudes
- Behavior
Environmental Effects
36Arousing
Russell and Lanius Affective Quality of Places
Upleasant
Pleasant
Not Arousing
37Kaplan and Kaplan Preference Model (Remember
Lynchs Spatial Descriptors!)
- Coherence making sense (an understandable
context) - Legibility the promise of making sense (for the
person) - Complexity involvement, number and variety of
elements within a scene - Mystery the promise of involvement
38- Coherence ease of organizing and structuring
parts, units, chunks, blocks or scene elements. - Patterns that result from many similar and
repeating parts allow for easier human
comprehension (similarity/proximity).
39- 2. Legibility is found in an environment that
looks as if one could explore extensively without
getting lost. - Undifferentiated sameness causes low legibility.
40- 3. Complexity a reflection of whether there is
enough present in the scene to keep one mentally
occupied. - Too little is boring, too much is overwhelming.
41- 4. Mystery occurs when a scene provides partial
information about what lies ahead, inviting
exploration. - Things are obscured in such a way as to reveal
their presence but not their full identity.
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