以下《城市信息学》专刊现已开放供投稿。提交截止日期为2024年6月30日。
专刊主题:Diagnosing Cities for Human Health and Emotional Well-being
客座主编:
江斌,香港科技大学(广州);邮箱:binjian@hkust-gz.edu.cn
陈筝,同济大学;邮箱:zhengchen@tongji.edu.cn
陈伟旋,香港科技大学(广州);邮箱:weixuanchen@hkust-gz.edu.cn
目标和范围:
城市环境作为不断变化的景观,深刻影响着居民的健康和情感福祉。本期特刊试图探讨城市结构与人类福祉之间多方面的相互作用,了解特定的城市空间如何与不同的健康结果相关,以及城市科学方法如何帮助创新地诊断和解决这些复杂的关系。通过跨学科探索,弥合经验、理论和方法论的分歧,以促进关于城市环境对人类健康和情感福祉在生理和心理上深远影响的学术讨论。
本特刊预期的贡献将集中于对城市形态和设计的深入分析,批判性地审视它们与人类健康(精神和生理)、压力水平和情绪健康的关系。鼓励提交采用严格的城市科学方法来评估城市结构对城市环境中人类健康和情感福祉的影响、揭示潜在的生活结构和情感健康的相关主题,以及欢迎对于探索生成式人工智能、大数据分析、人工智能 (AI) 和地理信息系统 (GIS) 等前沿工具在现代城市诊断和转型中的应用的投稿。
可能的主题:
本特刊欢迎来自城市科学、地理信息科学、地理学、建筑学、社会学、心理学、公共卫生和计算科学等广泛学科的学术贡献。我们的共同目标是通过设想一种优先考虑和培育人类福祉的城市未来,以促进对于该学科的探索。感兴趣的主题包括但不限于以下内容:
1. 城市形态对心理健康的影响
2. 城市环境中的感官知觉
3. 城市流动性及其对情感健康的影响
4. 城市结构及其对人类福祉影响的数据驱动分析
5. 可持续城市福祉策略
6. 减压理论及其在城市规划中的应用
7. 探索biophilia hypothesis和居住结构之间的关系
The following special issue in Urban Informatics is open for submissions. The submission deadline is June 30, 2024.
Theme: Diagnosing Cities for Human Health and Emotional Well-being
Guest editors:
Prof. Bin Jiang, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Guangzhou), China; binjiang@hkust-gz.edu.cn
Dr. Zheng Chen, Tongji University, China; zhengchen@tongji.edu.cn
Dr. Weixuan Chen, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Guangzhou), China; weixuanchen@hkust-gz.edu.cn
Aim & Scope:
Urban environments, as ever-evolving landscapes, profoundly influence the health and emotional well-being of inhabitants. This special issue endeavours to illuminate the multifaceted interplays between city structures and human well-being. Scholars are invited to embark on this interdisciplinary exploration, bridging the empirical, theoretical, and methodological divides. The primary objective of this special issue is to foster rigorous academic discourse on the profound impacts of urban environments on human health and emotional well-being, psychologically and psychologically. This exploration seeks to discern how specific urban spaces relate to diverse health outcomes and how city science methodologies can help innovatively diagnose and address these intricate relationships.
Contributions are anticipated to focus on the in-depth analysis of urban forms and designs, critically examining their correlations with human health (both mental and physiological), stress levels, and emotional well-being. Submissions that employ and critically assess city science methodologies in the examination of city structures' impact on human health and emotional well-being within urban environments are highly encouraged. We invite contributions that unveil the underlying living structures and emotional well-being. Of particular interest are submissions that explore the application of cutting-edge tools such as generative AI, big data analytics, artificial intelligence (AI), and geographic information systems (GIS) in the diagnosis and transformation of modern cities.
Possible topics:
This special issue aims to facilitate a comprehensive dialogue by welcoming scholarly contributions from a wide array of disciplines such as city science, geographic information science, geography, architecture, sociology, psychology, public health, and computational sciences. Our collective objective is to envision urban futures that prioritize and nurture human well-being. Topics of interest encompass, but are not limited to, the following:
1. The influence of urban forms on psychological well-being
2. Sensory perception in urban environments
3. Urban mobility and its impact on emotional well-being
4. Data-driven analysis of city structures and their effects on human well-being
5. Strategies for sustainable urban well-being
6. Stress reduction theories and their application to urban planning
7. Exploring the biophilia hypothesis and living structures
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