Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. A spatial model of cognitive distance in cities. ARTICLE HISTORY. Compiled February 15, 2021. ABSTRACT. Spatial cognition is fundamental to the behaviour and activity of humans in urban space. Humans perceive their environments with systematic biases and errors, and act upon these perceptions, which in turn form urban patterns of activity.

  2. 14 mar 2020 · At present, research on psychological distance has identified four major dimensions: spatial distance, temporal distance, social distance, and hypotheticality (Trope and Liberman 2010). The dimensions of psychological distance interact with one another; i.e., a change in one of the distance dimensions affects the perception of other distance ...

  3. This paper discusses a method to study the psychological environment of cities. The first section analyzes the historical origin of environmental psychology and its participation in urban...

  4. 19 lut 2021 · Unlike other cost measures, the cognitive distance estimate integrates systematically observed distortions and biases in spatial cognition. As a proof-of-concept, the framework is implemented for 26 cities worldwide using open data, producing a novel comparative measure of ‘cognitive accessibility’.

  5. Psychological distance is defined within the Construal-Level Theory (CLT), which was developed by Trope and Liberman . Their first approach referred only to the temporal distance and assumed that we judge a more distant event in time by few abstract characteristics (high-level construal).

  6. www.researchgate.net › publication › 332682218_Distance(PDF) Distance - ResearchGate

    2 lut 2020 · Distancephysical, material distanceis an obviously spatial concept, but one rarely engaged by legal or feminist geographers. We take up this oversight in relation to the 2016 U.S. Supreme...

  7. 1 mar 2021 · Introduction: from sociological urban theories to neurourbanism. Tönnies (1887) and Durkheim (1893) introduced the academic debate about the effects that living in cities have on us, soon followed by Simmel (1903), Park (1915), Weber et al. (1921), Wirth (1938), and Fisher (1972, 1973, 1975a).