FIND SIMILAR ARTICLES

Find similar articles based on semantic search




Id 2030
Author Buttazzoni A.; Dean J.; Minaker L.
Title Urban design and adolescent mental health: A qualitative examination of adolescent emotional responses to pedestrian- and transit-oriented design and cognitive architecture concepts
Reference

Buttazzoni A.; Dean J.; Minaker L. Urban design and adolescent mental health: A qualitative examination of adolescent emotional responses to pedestrian- and transit-oriented design and cognitive architecture concepts,Health and Place 76

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85130852969&doi=10.1016%2fj.healthplace.2022.102825&partnerID=40&md5=3e8918e46b689743c87e50fc9b6c8b42
Abstract With the continued migration of people into cities, urban environments are becoming increasingly important determinants of health. However, the study of how precise environmental designs are linked to mental health are generally lacking, especially among adolescent populations. Using a qualitative approach featuring 23 go-along interviews with adolescents, we investigated the relationships between specific urban designs as outlined in pedestrian- and transit-oriented design (imageability, enclosure, scale, transparency, complexity) and cognitive architecture (biophilic architecture, symmetries, fractals) concepts and adolescent mental health indicators (i.e., emotional responses). Central findings from the subsequently undertaken framework analysis include considerably different perceptions regarding natural versus built enclosure and landmarks, significantly more expressed emotional engagement with visually rich and transparent urban designs relative to grey/concrete and windowless designs, and strong positive reactions to the three cognitive architecture concepts. Additional exploratory gender-based analyses were conducted and found potential differences in perceptions of design concepts between boys and girls. We note the broader relevance of these findings by discussing their implications for practitioners and suggesting how they can advance certain UN Sustainable Development Goals. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd


Results:


Smaller Distance better similarity

Id View Author Title Distance
2975 View Buttazzoni A.; Minaker L. Associations between adolescent mental health and pedestrian- and transit-oriented urban design qualities: Evidence from a national-level online Canadian survey 85.7753
2836 View Xu L.; Zhang Y.; Li F.; Yin J. Perceptual difference of urban public spaces between design professionals and ‘laypersons’: Evidence, health implications and ready-made urban design templates 90.3733
2879 View Cremen G.; Galasso C.; McCloskey J.; Barcena A.; Creed M.; Filippi M.E.; Gentile R.; Jenkins L.T.; Kalaycioglu M.; Mentese E.Y.; Muthusamy M.; Tarbali K.; Trogrlić R.Š. A state-of-the-art decision-support environment for risk-sensitive and pro-poor urban planning and design in Tomorrow's cities 91.2274
2141 View Manfredo Manfredini M. Affirmatively reading deterritorialisation in urban space: An Aotearoa/New Zealand perspective 93.4886
2839 View Shrivastava R.; Singhal M.; Gupta M.; Joshi A. Development of an Artificial Intelligence–Guided Citizen-Centric Predictive Model for the Uptake of Maternal Health Services Among Pregnant Women Living in Urban Slum Settings in India: Protocol for a Cross-sectional Study With a Mixed Methods Design 101.08
3004 View Pineo H. Towards healthy urbanism: inclusive, equitable and sustainable (THRIVES)–an urban design and planning framework from theory to praxis 101.871
2932 View Sun Y.; Dogan T. Generative methods for Urban design and rapid solution space exploration 102.016
2797 View Nikezić A. Enhancing Biocultural Diversity of Wild Urban Woodland through Research-Based Architectural Design: Case Study—War Island in Belgrade, Serbia 107.472
2795 View Afacan Y. Impacts of urban living lab (ULL) on learning to design inclusive, sustainable, and climate-resilient urban environments 107.705
2712 View De Siqueira G.; Malaj S.; Hamdani M. Digitalization, Participation and Interaction: Towards More Inclusive Tools in Urban Design—A Literature Review 108.248
Note: Due to lack of computing power, results have been previously created and saved in database