Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
1 Αυγ 2016 · In short, sound provides critical geographers with a means of focussing on the relationality of social-spatial everyday life that is simultaneously structured by conscious thought and discursive practice, and non-conscious, visceral or gut responses.
- Making Sense of Sound
In this paper we offer visceral sonic mapping to those...
- Bodily Rhythms
Attention was paid to the interactional meaning of how...
- Listening and Tourism Studies
The article is divided into four sections. We begin by...
- Perception of Soundscapes
This paper takes an overall view of findings from the...
- How Boredom Matters
The thesis of disenchantment, despite holding an intuitive...
- Volume 20
The ethical potential of sound in public space: Migrant pan...
- Making Sense of Sound
29 Μαρ 2024 · Sound localization is the process by which the auditory system of humans and other mammals, including the ear and brain, determines the origin or location of a sound in space. When a sound reaches our ears, several key mechanisms come into play to help us pinpoint where it came from.
10 Αυγ 2016 · This paper argues for expanded listening in geography. Expanded listening addresses how bodies of all kinds, human and more-than-human, respond to sound. We show how listening can contribute to research on a wide range of topics, beyond enquiry where sound itself is the primary substantive interest.
Geographical psychology aims to study the spatial distribution of psychological phenomenon at different levels of geographical analysis and their relations to macro-level important societal outcomes. The geographical perspective provides a new way of understanding interactions between humankind psychological processes and distal macro-environments.
1 Δεκ 2016 · Geographical psychology is an emerging subarea of research concerned with the spatial organization of psychological phenomena and how individual characteristics, social entities, and physical features of the environment contribute to their organization.
23 Αυγ 2017 · Research into sound—including both musical and nonmusical sound—amounts to a varied body of work that straddles numerous disciplines, including history, philosophy, anthropology, sociology, musicology, and ecology.
1 Ιαν 1994 · An environmental or geographical perspective on sound can be used to examine our day to day experience with sound and to explore how such experiential sound can be applied to geographic visualization (Ohlson 1976; Schäfer 1977, 1985; Porteous and Mastin 1985; Gaver 1988; Pocock 1989).