The language of architectural diagrams
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
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- COSIT2019_DiagramsRevised
Accepted author manuscript, 4.95 MB, PDF document
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DOI
Complex buildings frequently present a challenge to users’ understanding, which may affect wayfinding as well as appreciation of the building’s structure. In this paper we focus on the building’s diagram, a representation by the building’s architect that captures its main ‘idea’. Motivated by the intuition that a building may be easier to understand if its conceptual diagram can be clearly and easily described, we explored perceivers’ descriptions of such diagrams' features. We asked students of Language and students of Architecture to write about the buildings represented in a variety of diagrams, and then repeated the task for photographs of the actual buildings. Using Cognitive Discourse Analysis, we aimed to create a first qualitative exploration of the linguistic and conceptual patterns that are associated with the perception of diagrams and images of complex buildings. Among other factors, results show how perception of the diagram's meaning is fundamentally affected by subject expertise. Linguistic patterns demonstrate the ways in which written descriptions reflect observers’ understanding and concepts of building representations, providing a starting point for future studies which may address the possible relationship between verbalisability of a diagram and the legibility of a building.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | COSIT 2019 |
Subtitle of host publication | 14th Conference on Spatial Information Theory |
Editors | Sabine Timpf, Christoph Schlieder, Markus Kattenbeck, Bernd Ludwig, Kathleen Stewart |
Publisher | Dagstuhl Publishing |
Chapter | 23 |
Pages | 17:1-17:14 |
ISBN (print) | 9783959771153 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2019 |
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