Way-Finding Strategies of Blind Persons in Urban Scale

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Date

2017

Authors

Kan Kılıç, Didem

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Open Access Color

BRONZE

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
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Average
Influence
Top 10%
Popularity
Top 10%

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine whether urban environments with different prominent sensory inputs have an impact on the way-finding strategies of blind people and to identify these impacts, where applicable. We specifically investigated how blind people use their senses to compensate for the lack of visual information and how the priority of senses changes according to the urban context. The participants of the study consisted of nine congenitally blind individuals and the study took place in two urban settings: a dense urban district, Kemeralti district in zmir; and an urban park, the zmir Fair Park. During the learning phase, a first trial along the selected routes was conducted for each participant individually along with one of the researchers. In the test phase, the participants were requested to re-walk the route and verbally report the environmental cues they attended to. The participants' verbal reports were recorded and transcripts of the recordings were coded according to the environmental sensory inputs. In addition, the short-term memory of each participant was also evaluated. The results show that the characteristics of the urban environment seem to have an impact on way-finding strategies of blind individuals. It was found that the sound of the city and the echo from the environment are the most important factors for blind participants in the dense urban environment. Environmental boundaries provided echoes and gave a sense of enclosure that helped them orient themselves, whereas, in the park environment, the sense of enclosure was not enhanced due to a lack of boundaries in the environment.

Description

Keywords

blind persons, sense of enclosure, senses, way-finding, Cognitive Maps, Vision, Representation, Pedestrians, Information, System, Adult, Male, Sense of enclosure, Spatial Learning, Persons with Visual Disabilities, Way-finding strategies, Urban environment, Blindness, Blind persons, Young Adult, Senses, Humans, Female, Cities, Orientation, Spatial, Aged, Spatial Navigation

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q3
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OpenCitations Citation Count
5

Source

Psych Journal

Volume

6

Issue

4

Start Page

303

End Page

315
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Citations

CrossRef : 5

Scopus : 8

PubMed : 2

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 49

SCOPUS™ Citations

8

checked on Mar 22, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

3

checked on Mar 22, 2026

Page Views

4

checked on Mar 22, 2026

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0.2632

Sustainable Development Goals

11

SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
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