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senseplace

Senseplace is a multidisciplinary concept, and in some contexts a software platform, that examines how sensory experiences shape the perception and use of physical spaces. The term combines sense and place to describe environments defined by their sensory character—soundscapes, textures, smells, lighting, and tactile cues—as well as the technological or informational context that accompanies them.

Origins and scope: Senseplace draws on sensorial geography, environmental psychology, and human–computer interaction. In academic discourse,

Data and methods: Typical approaches include sensor networks for sound, air quality, or light; wearable or mobile

Applications: Senseplace informs urban design and heritage interpretation, tourism, accessibility research, and immersive media experiences. It

Challenges and critique: The concept faces subjectivity in sensory experience, privacy concerns, data standardization issues, and

it
refers
to
the
study
of
how
multisensory
cues,
memory,
and
social
meaning
influence
people’s
sense
of
place.
In
technology
contexts,
senseplace
is
used
to
describe
platforms
or
workflows
that
map
sensory
data
to
geographic
locations,
enabling
immersive
storytelling,
augmented
reality,
or
urban
analytics.
ethnography;
surveys;
and
GIS-based
visualization.
Data
models
emphasize
multimodal
attributes
(for
example,
brightness,
noise
level,
odor
intensity)
and
temporal
dynamics.
can
support
participatory
planning
by
translating
residents’
sensorial
experiences
into
map-based
narratives.
risks
of
overquantifying
lived
experience.
See
also
sense
of
place,
sensory
geography,
and
geovisualization.