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  1. The term sense of place is used to describe how someone perceives and experiences a place or environment. Anthropologists Steven Feld and Keith Basso define sense of place as: 'the experiential and expressive ways places are known, imagined, yearned for, held, remembered, voiced, lived, contested and struggled over […]’.

    • George Seddon
    • 1972
  2. Sep 18, 2020 · In recent decades, though, architects and designers have increasingly started to consider the other senses, namely sound, touch (including proprioception, kinesthesis, and the vestibular sense), smell, and on rare occasions, even taste in their work.

    • Charles Spence
    • charles.spence@psy.ox.ac.uk
    • 2020
  3. Mar 2, 2022 · Building on this idea, the components of sense of place are understood as place identity representing an individual belief about a place; place attachment, i.e., a (positive) feeling of individual towards a place; and place satisfaction (operative dependence) indicating a functional expectation of a place.

  4. Sense of place is defined as the emotional connections and attachments individuals form with specific locations and environments, ranging from homes to nations. It encompasses both positive feelings of comfort and safety, as well as negative emotions like fear and placelessness.

  5. Nov 2, 2001 · Concepts associated with a sense of place may include the following: place attachment, topophilia, place dependence, rootedness, dwelling, belonging, genius loci, biophilia, and place...

  6. Apr 21, 2019 · Sense of place emerges from human interactions/experience with the environment. Sense of place is subjective, but its components vary systematically. Types of behaviour may be predicted by patterned relationships with place.

  7. Sense of place is greater than its environmental and spatial parts and can evoke both positive and negative qualities. Most broadly, sense of place relates to the customary ways in which a place makes itself felt-its specific manner of being as perceived, encountered, known, and remembered by the human beings engaging with that place.