From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations

Effective resource planning incorporates people-place relationships, allowing these efforts to be inclusive of the different local beliefs, interests, activities and needs. ‘Geovisualizations’ can serve as potentially powerful tools for facilitating ‘place-conscious’ resource planning, as they can b...

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Main Authors: Robert Newell, Rosaline Canessa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-02-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017320157
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spelling doaj-a4ab9608680547cd9cd0b02441d0d4d72020-11-25T02:44:25ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402018-02-014210.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00547From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizationsRobert NewellRosaline CanessaEffective resource planning incorporates people-place relationships, allowing these efforts to be inclusive of the different local beliefs, interests, activities and needs. ‘Geovisualizations’ can serve as potentially powerful tools for facilitating ‘place-conscious’ resource planning, as they can be developed with high degrees of realism and accuracy, allowing people to recognize and relate to them as ‘real places’. However, little research has been done on this potential, and the place-based applications of these visual tools are poorly understood. This study takes steps toward addressing this gap by exploring the relationship between sense of place and ‘visualization of place’. Residents of the Capital Regional District of BC, Canada, were surveyed about their relationship with local coastal places, concerns for the coast, and how they mentally visualize these places. Factor analysis identified four sense of place dimensions - nature protection values, community and economic well-being values, place identity and place dependence, and four coastal concerns dimensions - ecological, private opportunities, public space and boating impacts. Visualization data were coded and treated as dependent variables in a series of logistic regressions that used sense of place and coastal concerns dimensions as predictors. Results indicated that different aspects of sense of place and (to a lesser degree) concerns for places influence the types of elements people include in their mental visualization of place. In addition, sense of place influenced the position and perspective people assume in these visualizations. These findings suggest that key visual elements and perspectives speak to different place relationships, which has implications for developing and using geovisualizations in terms of what elements should be included in tools and (if appropriate) depicted as affected by potential management or development scenarios.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017320157GeographyPsychology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Newell
Rosaline Canessa
spellingShingle Robert Newell
Rosaline Canessa
From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
Heliyon
Geography
Psychology
author_facet Robert Newell
Rosaline Canessa
author_sort Robert Newell
title From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
title_short From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
title_full From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
title_fullStr From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
title_full_unstemmed From sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
title_sort from sense of place to visualization of place: examining people-place relationships for insight on developing geovisualizations
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Effective resource planning incorporates people-place relationships, allowing these efforts to be inclusive of the different local beliefs, interests, activities and needs. ‘Geovisualizations’ can serve as potentially powerful tools for facilitating ‘place-conscious’ resource planning, as they can be developed with high degrees of realism and accuracy, allowing people to recognize and relate to them as ‘real places’. However, little research has been done on this potential, and the place-based applications of these visual tools are poorly understood. This study takes steps toward addressing this gap by exploring the relationship between sense of place and ‘visualization of place’. Residents of the Capital Regional District of BC, Canada, were surveyed about their relationship with local coastal places, concerns for the coast, and how they mentally visualize these places. Factor analysis identified four sense of place dimensions - nature protection values, community and economic well-being values, place identity and place dependence, and four coastal concerns dimensions - ecological, private opportunities, public space and boating impacts. Visualization data were coded and treated as dependent variables in a series of logistic regressions that used sense of place and coastal concerns dimensions as predictors. Results indicated that different aspects of sense of place and (to a lesser degree) concerns for places influence the types of elements people include in their mental visualization of place. In addition, sense of place influenced the position and perspective people assume in these visualizations. These findings suggest that key visual elements and perspectives speak to different place relationships, which has implications for developing and using geovisualizations in terms of what elements should be included in tools and (if appropriate) depicted as affected by potential management or development scenarios.
topic Geography
Psychology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017320157
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