Partners in the street ballet: An embodied process of person-space coupling in the built environment
Authored by Alasdair Turner
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1177/0265813516638185
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Abstract
The diurnal movements of pedestrians in the built environment are
sometimes typified as a `street ballet', where each actor or dancer has
their own set role within a larger complex. Every individual in the
ballet may have many influences on their behaviour including the
physical layout of the environment, cognitive strategies to navigate it,
experiential or affective preferences as well as social, economic and
political factors, but ultimately each one seems to obey apparently
choreographed actions. The aim of this article is to understand whether
or not there is in fact an underlying choreography to the ballet, in
that certain steps or moves are more likely than others, such that a `
dance' through daily life is constructed. To do so, simple automata that
use active perception to inhabit the world are evolved against different
tasks within the environment, representing different sets of moves that
may be taken. It is shown that any evolved automaton appears to embody a
mathematical person-space relationship that joins visual affordance with
motor action: the convergence of a simple Markov model of visual
movement. From the Markov model, a general model of embodied action in
the environment is proposed, whereby memory of the dance is ingrained
over evolutionary history, such that it forms building blocks for
non-discursive action within the built environment and comprises a
possible common phenomenological framework.
Tags
Agent-based models
behavior
natural movement
Markov model
Artificial neural networks
evolutionary robotics
Embodied space
Proto-visual automaton
Ambient optic array
Animat model
Affordances
Artificial evolution