Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques

Cities are human ecosystems. Understanding human ecology is important for designing and planning the built environment. The ability to respond to changes and adapt actions in a positive way helps determine the health of cities. Recently, many studies have highlighted the great potential of photograp...

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Main Authors: Iacopo Bernetti, Veronica Alampi Sottini, Lorenzo Bambi, Elena Barbierato, Tommaso Borghini, Irene Capecchi, Claudio Saragosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/10/3982
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spelling doaj-0845a7ceb466464c8ed585c19d43741a2020-11-25T03:28:16ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-05-01123982398210.3390/su12103982Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical TechniquesIacopo Bernetti0Veronica Alampi Sottini1Lorenzo Bambi2Elena Barbierato3Tommaso Borghini4Irene Capecchi5Claudio Saragosa6Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry DAGRI, University of Florence, Piazzale delle Cascine 18, 50144 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry DAGRI, University of Florence, Piazzale delle Cascine 18, 50144 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Architecture DIDA, University of Florence, Via della Mattonaia, 14, 50121 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry DAGRI, University of Florence, Piazzale delle Cascine 18, 50144 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Architecture DIDA, University of Florence, Via della Mattonaia, 14, 50121 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry DAGRI, University of Florence, Piazzale delle Cascine 18, 50144 Firenze, ItalyDepartment of Architecture DIDA, University of Florence, Via della Mattonaia, 14, 50121 Firenze, ItalyCities are human ecosystems. Understanding human ecology is important for designing and planning the built environment. The ability to respond to changes and adapt actions in a positive way helps determine the health of cities. Recently, many studies have highlighted the great potential of photographic data shared on the Flickr platform for the analysis of environmental perceptions in landscape and urban planning. Other research works used panoramic images from the Google Street View (GSV) web service to extract urban quality data. Although other researches have used social media to characterize human habitat from an emotional point of view, there is still a lack of knowledge of the correlation between environmental and physical variables of the city and visual perception, especially at a scale suitable for urban planning and design. In ecology, the environmental suitability of a territory for a given biological community is studied through species distribution models (SDM). In this work we have adopted the state of the art of SDM (the ensemble approach) to develop a methodology transferable to cities with different sizes and characteristics that uses data deriving from many sources available on a global scale: social media platform, Google internet services, shared geographical information, remote sensing and geomorphological data. The result of our application in the city of Livorno offers important information on the most significant variables for the conservation, planning and design of urban public spaces at the project scale. However, further research developments will be needed to test the model in cities of different sizes and geographic locations, integrate the model with other social media, other databases and with traditional surveys and improve the quality of indicators that can be derived from information shared on the Internet.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/10/3982urban human nicheFlickrgeotagged imageurban metricslandscape metricsgeo-statistics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iacopo Bernetti
Veronica Alampi Sottini
Lorenzo Bambi
Elena Barbierato
Tommaso Borghini
Irene Capecchi
Claudio Saragosa
spellingShingle Iacopo Bernetti
Veronica Alampi Sottini
Lorenzo Bambi
Elena Barbierato
Tommaso Borghini
Irene Capecchi
Claudio Saragosa
Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
Sustainability
urban human niche
Flickr
geotagged image
urban metrics
landscape metrics
geo-statistics
author_facet Iacopo Bernetti
Veronica Alampi Sottini
Lorenzo Bambi
Elena Barbierato
Tommaso Borghini
Irene Capecchi
Claudio Saragosa
author_sort Iacopo Bernetti
title Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
title_short Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
title_full Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
title_fullStr Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
title_full_unstemmed Urban Niche Assessment: An Approach Integrating Social Media Analysis, Spatial Urban Indicators and Geo-Statistical Techniques
title_sort urban niche assessment: an approach integrating social media analysis, spatial urban indicators and geo-statistical techniques
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Cities are human ecosystems. Understanding human ecology is important for designing and planning the built environment. The ability to respond to changes and adapt actions in a positive way helps determine the health of cities. Recently, many studies have highlighted the great potential of photographic data shared on the Flickr platform for the analysis of environmental perceptions in landscape and urban planning. Other research works used panoramic images from the Google Street View (GSV) web service to extract urban quality data. Although other researches have used social media to characterize human habitat from an emotional point of view, there is still a lack of knowledge of the correlation between environmental and physical variables of the city and visual perception, especially at a scale suitable for urban planning and design. In ecology, the environmental suitability of a territory for a given biological community is studied through species distribution models (SDM). In this work we have adopted the state of the art of SDM (the ensemble approach) to develop a methodology transferable to cities with different sizes and characteristics that uses data deriving from many sources available on a global scale: social media platform, Google internet services, shared geographical information, remote sensing and geomorphological data. The result of our application in the city of Livorno offers important information on the most significant variables for the conservation, planning and design of urban public spaces at the project scale. However, further research developments will be needed to test the model in cities of different sizes and geographic locations, integrate the model with other social media, other databases and with traditional surveys and improve the quality of indicators that can be derived from information shared on the Internet.
topic urban human niche
Flickr
geotagged image
urban metrics
landscape metrics
geo-statistics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/10/3982
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