Mapping Psychological and Virtual Spaces (1998)
| Venue: | FROM SCRATCH GUIDED ASSEMBLY COMPLETE EXISTING OBJECT REPLACE PARTS REVERSE EXISTING OBJECT OPERATE EXISTING OBJECT |
| Citations: | 5 - 3 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Strohecker98mappingpsychological,
author = {Carol Strohecker and Barbara Barros and Adrienne Slaughter},
title = {Mapping Psychological and Virtual Spaces},
booktitle = {FROM SCRATCH GUIDED ASSEMBLY COMPLETE EXISTING OBJECT REPLACE PARTS REVERSE EXISTING OBJECT OPERATE EXISTING OBJECT},
year = {1998},
publisher = {APPENDIX}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
WayMaker" is a tool enabling non-professionals to create digital layouts for large-scale graphical virtual environments. The design tool is based on "elements of the city image" as described by the urban planner, Kevin Lynch (1960). Ultimately, WayMaker should be situated within a virtual environment so that output from the tool is transformed as extensions to the virtual world. Here we describe an initial prototype that simulates a virtual domain through a series of composited frames. Our work with users informs continued development of the tool. We also plan usage studies conducted from a cognitive science perspective, examining issues of constructive learning and spatial cognition. This work may not be copied or reproduced in whole or in part for any commercial purpose. Permission to copy in whole or in part without payment of fee is granted for nonprofit educational and research purposes provided that all such whole or partial copies include the following: a notice that such copying is by permission of MERL - A Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratory, of Cambridge, Massachusetts; an acknowledgment of the authors and individual contributions to the work; and all applicable portions of the copyright notice. Copying, reproduction, or republishing for any other purpose shall require a license with payment of fee to MERL - A Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratory. All rights reserved. Copyright MERL - A Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratory, 1998 201 Broadway, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 2 Long ago the urban theorist Kevin Lynch pointed out the fundamental relationship between human cognition and urban form --- the importance of the learned mental maps that knowledgeable locals carry about inside their skulls. These mental maps, together with the landmarks and ed...







