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Place descriptions by landmarks
Humans often describe places by landmarks in natural language. However, there is no appropriate digital representation of human concepts of place - a so far elusive concept - for use in information systems. This paper proposes and tests a formal model to capture the concept of place in human perception by transferring the concept of fingerprints from robotics: a place being characterized by the landmarks around it. For the purpose of realistically testing whether places can be described by fingerprints, an algorithm for computing places from fingerprints and, independently, an in situ survey to capture these places and their fingerprints were designed. The results indicate that the union of all locations with the same fingerprint characterizes a 'place' in human cognition.
Place descriptions by landmarks
Humans often describe places by landmarks in natural language. However, there is no appropriate digital representation of human concepts of place - a so far elusive concept - for use in information systems. This paper proposes and tests a formal model to capture the concept of place in human perception by transferring the concept of fingerprints from robotics: a place being characterized by the landmarks around it. For the purpose of realistically testing whether places can be described by fingerprints, an algorithm for computing places from fingerprints and, independently, an in situ survey to capture these places and their fingerprints were designed. The results indicate that the union of all locations with the same fingerprint characterizes a 'place' in human cognition.
Place descriptions by landmarks
Zhou, Sha (author) / Winter, Stephan / Vasardani, Maria / Zhou, Shunping
2017
Article (Journal)
English
Saving Place: 50 Years of New York City Landmarks
British Library Online Contents | 2016
|Online Contents | 1997
Online Contents | 1997
Online Contents | 1996
Online Contents | 1997