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  • Article (2)
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  • Hijazi, Ihab Hamzi (4)
  • König, Reinhard (4)
  • Schmitt, Gerhard (3)
  • Bielik, Martin (2)
  • Donath, Dirk (2)
  • Li, Xin (2)
  • Schneider, Sven (2)
  • Hussein, M. H. (1)
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  • Juniorprofessur Computational Architecture (4)
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  • Emotion (1)
  • GIS (1)
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  • 2014 (2)
  • 2016 (2)

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Enabling geo-design: Evaluating the capacity of 3D city model to support thermal design in building (2014)
Hijazi, Ihab Hamzi ; Hussein, M. H. ; König, Reinhard
Enabling geo-design: Evaluating the capacity of 3D city model to support thermal design in building
Assessing Essential Qualities of Urban Space with Emotional and Visual Data Based on GIS Technique (2016)
Xin, Li ; Hijazi, Ihab Hamzi ; König, Reinhard ; Lv, Zhihan ; Zhong, Chen ; Schmitt, Gerhard
Finding a method to evaluate people’s emotional responses to urban spaces in a valid and objective way is fundamentally important for urban design practices and related policy making. Analysis of the essential qualities of urban space could be made both more effective and more accurate using innovative information techniques that have become available in the era of big data. This study introduces an integrated method based on geographical information systems (GIS) and an emotion-tracking technique to quantify the relationship between people’s emotional responses and urban space. This method can evaluate the degree to which people’s emotional responses are influenced by multiple urban characteristics such as building shapes and textures, isovist parameters, visual entropy, and visual fractals. The results indicate that urban spaces may influence people’s emotional responses through both spatial sequence arrangements and shifting scenario sequences. Emotional data were collected with body sensors and GPS devices. Spatial clustering was detected to target effective sampling locations; then, isovists were generated to extract building textures. Logistic regression and a receiver operating characteristic analysis were used to determine the key isovist parameters and the probabilities that they influenced people’s emotion. Finally, based on the results, we make some suggestions for design professionals in the field of urban space optimization.
Using geo statistical analysis to detect similarities in emotional responses of urban walkers to urban space (2014)
König, Reinhard ; Schneider, Sven ; Hijazi, Ihab Hamzi ; Li, Xin ; Bielik, Martin ; Schmitt, Gerhard ; Donath, Dirk
Using geo statistical analysis to detect similarities in emotional responses of urban walkers to urban space
Geostatistical Analysis for the Study of Relationships between the Emotional Responses of Urban Walkers to Urban Spaces (2016)
Hijazi, Ihab Hamzi ; König, Reinhard ; Schneider, Sven ; Li, Xin ; Bielik, Martin ; Schmitt, Gerhard ; Donath, Dirk
The described study aims to find correlations between urban spatial configurations and human emotions. To this end, the authors measured people’s emotions while they walk along a path in an urban area using an instrument that measures skin conductance and skin temperature. The corresponding locations of the test persons were measured recorded by using a GPS-tracker (n=13). The results are interpreted and categorized as measures for positive and negative emotional arousal. To evaluate the technical and methodological process. The test results offer initial evidence that certain spaces or spatial sequences do cause positive or negative emotional arousal while others are relatively neutral. To achieve the goal of the study, the outcome was used as a basis for the study of testing correlations between people’s emotional responses and urban spatial configurations represented by Isovist properties of the urban form. By using their model the authors can explain negative emotional arousal for certain places, but they couldn’t find a model to predict emotional responses for individual spatial configurations.
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