Categories: Uncategorized

Urbanopticon Wants To Learn How You Mentally Map Your City

The University of Cambridge has created an online game asking users to identify areas of London using Google Street View screenshots. Participants of the game are doing more than just testing their skills, as the project aims to learn how its players mentally map different locations around the city, ultimately creating a London-wide map of recognizability. Urbanopticon’s team was inspired by The Image of the City, a book by Kevin Lynch, which outlines a theory connecting urban recognizability to a person’s well-being. During gameplay, specific areas of London are shown to the player, but the game asks orientational questions like where the nearest transit station is located, or if they can identify generally what section of the city they’re seeing. The team hopes to quantify city dweller’s perceptions by compiling and analyzing the kind of responses they get. Project information on the website details the key features that will help to create the London map: “By testing which places are remarkable and unmistakable and which places represent faceless sprawl, we are able to draw the recognisability map of London.” height=350 The game works by giving you ten random images from around the city. Players can either guess the tube station, borough, or click “Don’t know” if they want to move ahead. You’re given a score for each one you guess correctly, and the website even allows you to brag about your impressive recognizability on Facebook or Twitter. Once you’ve completed the game, the website asks you to provide key social details like birth location, place of employment, and familiarity with the city itself. An ideal outcome of the project will compile enough information to make a useful recognizability map that will help urban committees when placing and designing new buildings, or allow them to locate already existing urban areas that need improvements and renovations. Urbanopticon’s team is looking to continue the project over time, providing analysis of how people’s perceptions change as the city itself makes changes. If the project is a success, the researchers hope to expand to other cities around the world.  

Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Share
Published by
Techli

Recent Posts

Ness Digital Engineering appoints Sudip Singh as CEO as the company doubles down on AI

Ness Digital Engineering, a company focused on software, data, and digital product engineering, has appointed…

2 semanas ago

Houston-based startup announces integration of orbital biomedical OS to advance biological discovery in low Earth orbit

Commercial space station developer Starlab Space announced this week that it has partnered with Helogen…

2 semanas ago

What the launch of Revenue OS by ADvendio signals for the future of agentic advertising

It won't come as a surprise that agentic AI holds tremendous promise for the advertising…

2 semanas ago

Billdr relaunches as new “OS” for construction back office, raises $3.2 million

Software company Billdr, which is building the AI-native operating system for construction, announced in late…

4 semanas ago

Ness appoints new CTO to ATONIS to bring intelligent engineering to enterprises

AI has long promised to unlock widespread operational efficiencies, automate workflows and generate key business…

4 semanas ago

Crescite Bets on Faith-Driven Finance With Catholic USD™, a New Kind of Stablecoin

Crescite Innovation Corporation is entering the stablecoin space with an approach that challenges the dominant…

1 mes ago