25,603 research outputs found
Digital representation of park use and visual analysis of visitor activities
Urban public parks can serve an important function by contributing to urban citizens' quality of life. At the same time, they can be the location of processes of displacement and exclusion. Despite this ambiguous role, little is known about actual park use patterns. To learn more about park use in three parks in Zurich, Switzerland, extensive data on visitor activities was collected using a new method based on direct recording via a portable GIS solution. Then, the data was analyzed using qualitative and quantitative methods. This paper examines whether geographic visualization of these data can help domain experts like landscape designers and park managers to assess park use. To maximize accessibility, the visualizations are made available through a web-interface of a common, off-the-shelf GIS. The technical limitations imposed by this choice are critically assessed, before the available visualization techniques are evaluated in respect to the needs and tasks of practitioners with limited knowledge on spatial analysis and GIS. Key criteria are each technique's level of abstraction and graphical complexity. The utility and suitability of the visualization techniques is characterized for the distinct phases of exploration, analysis and synthesis. The findings suggest that for a target user group of practitioners, a combination of dot maps showing the raw data and surface maps showing derived density values for several attributes serves the purpose of knowledge generation best
How would tourists use Green Spaces? Case Studies in Lisbon
EntretextosThis report provides in a relative condensed format the results of small-scale study undertaken in Lisbon during the
Meeting of the CyberParks Project (www.cost.eu/COST_Actions/tud/Actions/TU1306). CyberParks is a COST Action
coordinated by the Universidade Lusófona at the CeiED - Interdisciplinary Research Centre for Education and
Development. The Project aims at creating a research platform on the relationship between Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT) and the production of public open spaces, and their relevance to sustainable urban
development. The impacts of this relationship are being explored from social, ecological, urban design and technological
perspectives.
Based on the supposition that the participants of the Meeting are tourists visiting Lisbon, a survey was carried out on
the topic how people actually use and how they would use public spaces. This survey is also the first approach to the
case study areas chosen in Lisbon: Parque Quinta das Conchas and Jardim da Estrela. Both green spaces will be subject
of further studies in the forthcoming years.
This study employed (1) a questionnaire for measuring the user’s experience and preferences, and (2) two different
tracking devices that utilise GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems), in our case the GPS for satellite positioning
technologies. It also presents the results of a study on the relevance of wi-fi in Lisbon’s public spaces. Even considering
that the surveys in Lisbon’s green spaces are a first exercise within the work programme of CyberParks they show
important outcomes. On the one hand, regarding the technologies used and their potential for research and on the
other hand the findings about Lisbon’s green spaces. It should be noted that the conducted surveys and the gathered
data are statistically not representative, but can be characterised as an empirical case and as a showcase, as how
tourists tend to use a green space. The results shows that surveys benefit from multiple research methods and from
combining insights.Este relatório apresenta, em formato condensado, os resultados de um estudo de pequena escala realizado em Lisboa
durante o Seminário do Projeto CyberParks. CyberParks é uma Ação COST coordenada pela Universidade Lusófona/CeiED
- Centro de Estudos Interdisciplinares em Educação e Desenvolvimento. O projeto visa a criação de uma plataforma de
debate sobre a relação entre as Tecnologias de Informação e Comunicação (TIC) e a produção de espaços públicos, e
da sua relevância para o desenvolvimento urbano sustentável. Os impactos dessa relação estão a ser explorados a partir
de perspetivas sociais, ecológicas, tecnológicas e de desenho urbano.
Na sua etapa exploratória, este estudo assenta na suposição de que os participantes do Seminário são turistas de visita
a Lisboa. A partir dos dados recolhidos pelos investigadores envolvidos na ação COST, foi realizada uma análise à forma
como diferentes indivíduos usam, e como poderão usar, diferentes espaços públicos verdes. Este estudo apresenta,
portanto, a primeira abordagem às áreas de estudos selecionadas em Lisboa. São elas o Parque Quinta das Conchas e
o Jardim da Estrela. Ambos os espaços verdes serão objeto de novos estudos nos próximos anos. Neste primeiro estudo
exploratório foram empregues: (1) um questionário, para aferir a experiência de um potencial utilizador e as suas
preferências, e (2) dois dispositivos diferentes de rastreamento que utilizam tecnologia GNSS (Sistemas de Navegação
Global por Satélite) e, no nosso caso, o GPS para as tecnologias de posicionamento por satélite. Ele também apresenta
os resultados de um estudo realizado sobre a relevância do wi-fi em espaços públicos na cidade de Lisboa.
Mesmo considerando que os estudos realizados nos espaços verdes representam um primeiro exercício no âmbito do
programa de trabalho do CyberParks em Lisboa, são aqui revelados resultados importantes. Por um lado, o recurso às
tecnologias utilizadas e seu potencial para a investigação e, por outro lado, os resultados sobre a vivência dos espaços
verdes. Deve-se notar que os dados recolhidos não são estatisticamente representativos, mas evidenciam um caso
empírico de como turistas tendem a usar um espaço verde urbano. A combinação do questionário com novos métodos
digitais resultou num grande ganho de conhecimento, recobrindo as áreas de estudo sob a perspetiva de um turista,
para além de maiores informações sobre as potencialidades e limites da tecnologia digital como ferramenta de
investigação. Os resultados mostram que a investigação no campo social pode se beneficiar da combinação de vários
métodos e técnicas
Animation Installation: the Affect of Place
Goosebumps, hairs stand on end, a knot in the stomach, an inexplicable feeling of chill or even panic...walking through an unfamiliar place can have a visceral impact on the human subject.
This artist’s presentation will consider the experience of viewing animation within the context of a site-specific installation and, through reference to examples of exhibitions by Birgitta Hosea in which contemporary animations are displayed as an intervention in historic spaces, will investigate the affect of site and the impact of the viewing context on the embodied perception of an animation
Recreation, tourism and nature in a changing world : proceedings of the fifth international conference on monitoring and management of visitor flows in recreational and protected areas : Wageningen, the Netherlands, May 30-June 3, 2010
Proceedings of the fifth international conference on monitoring and management of visitor flows in recreational and protected areas : Wageningen, the Netherlands, May 30-June 3, 201
Recommended from our members
Using ICT to support public and private community memories: case studies and lessons learned
Information communication technologies (ICTs) enable the development of memories across a variety of communities. We identify a spectrum of deployment from private through to open public spaces. As we move along this spectrum key variables change including mechanisms of trust and accountability and the definition of ownership, authorship and readership. Some challenges however, remain constant such as designing for sustainability and the need to align research and community goals.
Private spaces can be created to enhance existing interactions, develop bonding capital and build shared memory. Such spaces allow a defined membership the opportunity to explore new ideas away from the public gaze, using language which may not be intelligible to outsiders. ICTs may be used to bridge internal and external audiences, repurposing content for a wider public. The original content may require alternative presentation, organisation or navigation methods to support its effective use by an external audience.
Increasingly, community memories are being developed using social software within the public sphere, however this raises issues of authority, reputation management, and conflict resolution. Unexpected innovation may occur, and issues of sustainability must be addressed. In our analysis we will draw on three ICT initiatives in which we have participated: Bletchley Park Guides’ Forum, Bletchley Park Text and Milton Keynes Open Guide
Vision-Based Production of Personalized Video
In this paper we present a novel vision-based system for the automated production of personalised video souvenirs for visitors in leisure and cultural heritage venues. Visitors are visually identified and tracked through a camera network. The system produces a personalized DVD souvenir at the end of a visitor’s stay allowing visitors to relive their experiences. We analyze how we identify visitors by fusing facial and body features, how we track visitors, how the tracker recovers from failures due to occlusions, as well as how we annotate and compile the final product. Our experiments demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed approach
Layering landscapes: Linguistic commodification and semiotic layering in United States’ recreational spaces
In the process of linguistic landscaping, spaces are transformed into textual and semiotic representations linked to particular social uses, cultural meanings, and historic narratives. Recently, digital technology has been used to create additional layers of semiotic representation in linguistic landscapes. This dissertation investigates multiple layers of digital and physical representation at six United States’ park spaces, with a particular focus on heritage tourism sites, and analyzes the social meaning and narratives of tourism constructed both by individual layers and within their relationships. Photo-based methods are used to collect data, both by documenting the representations of sites as filtered through the AR platform, Niantic’s Pokémon GO, as well as through photographing the physical sites in-person. This process of ground truthing revealed the erasure of Indigenous histories, as well as amplification of eurocentric histories, which was perpetuated by both the physical and digital layer. The results also revealed a simplification of representations via the digital layer, as well as the role of corporate mediation in regulating space representation. These results are significant in revealing the role of augmented reality in portraying a particular sanitized and gamified version of the spaces. This project also suggests a need within linguistic landscaping research for more engagement with the interdisciplinarity of landscape studies as a whole, particularly, in a US parks context, for gaining a more precise and holistic view of the complex histories and contexts that are obscured by both physical and digital representations
Recommended from our members
Cultural capital investment interim impact evaluation
This report provides interim impact evaluation evidence on a major initiative to develop the quality and opportunity of cultural provision in the East Midlands. Eight venues across the region have been supported through an investment totalling £120 million, which include a mix of brand new buildings and bringing new life to existing facilities. This report sets out what the investment has achieved so far and how information on the impact of the venues will be collected in the future
'Sedimented histories' and 'embodied legacies': Creating an evaluative framework for understanding public engagement with the First World War
This article reflects on the development of a new methodological framework for the evaluation of the impact of the Centre for Hidden Histories, one of the Arts and Humanities Research Council's First World War Engagement Centres. It shows how through evaluative processes such as academic and community partner Shared Experience Workshops, and community-focused Reflection Workshops, the historical, social, cultural and economic benefits of the centre can be highlighted. It also demonstrates how public engagement in these community history projects has resulted in the identification of new 'embodied legacies' (Facer and Enright, 2016) and heretofore marginalized 'sedimented histories' (Lloyd and Moore, 2015). These lessons in evaluation can be taken forward to inform future national commemorative moments, such as the centenary of the Second World War.This research has been conducted as part of the AHRC Centre for Hidden Histories. First at the
University of Nottingham (June 2016 – September 2018), and then at the University of Derby (September 2018 – present)
Recommended from our members
Small cities for a small country: Sustaining the cultural renaissance?
Copyright @ 2006 RoutledgeThis chapter explores the implications for smaller cities of adopting culture-led
regeneration strategies. It is suggested that there is a divergence between cultural
planning for long term sustainable urban cultural renaissance and culture-led
makeovers which rely on externally orientated projects devised to draw in new
visitors, residents and enterprises. Drawing on evidence from Sheffield, an industrial
city in South Yorkshire, northern England, it is suggested that small cities by thinking
big, have been seduced into entering a culture-led city competition in which the
stakes are high and the prospects of success limited
- …