A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape

Visual Impact Assessment (VIA) is one of the important assessments in creating positive visual quality in an urban streetscape setting. Reliability of the VIA results has always been a fundamental issue as the assessment deals with both the objective and subjective assessments carried out by the exp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mat Rani, Ruzaimi
Format: Thesis
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my-mmu-ep.6297
record_format uketd_dc
spelling my-mmu-ep.62972016-01-27T09:25:39Z A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape 2011-02 Mat Rani, Ruzaimi BF Psychology (General) Visual Impact Assessment (VIA) is one of the important assessments in creating positive visual quality in an urban streetscape setting. Reliability of the VIA results has always been a fundamental issue as the assessment deals with both the objective and subjective assessments carried out by the experts and lay public. This has resulted a ‘gap’ between both groups as they use different assessment approaches and visualization tools. Due to the rapid change of information communication technology (ICT) and computer graphic visualization, there is a possibility where visual perception between both groups has changed. Apart from this, there is also a possibility where visual perception between experts and lay public may have a distinguishing equivalence especially on the visual perception ‘decision’. This research starts with a critical review on VIA approaches based on theories and existing research implementation of VIA. It then continues with surveys of the visual perception between the experts and lay public on the landscape aspects of the urban streetscape and visualization tools used in VIA. 2011-02 Thesis http://shdl.mmu.edu.my/6297/ http://library.mmu.edu.my/diglib/onlinedb/dig_lib.php phd doctoral Multimedia University Faculty of Creative Multimedia
institution Multimedia University
collection MMU Institutional Repository
topic BF Psychology (General)
spellingShingle BF Psychology (General)
Mat Rani, Ruzaimi
A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
description Visual Impact Assessment (VIA) is one of the important assessments in creating positive visual quality in an urban streetscape setting. Reliability of the VIA results has always been a fundamental issue as the assessment deals with both the objective and subjective assessments carried out by the experts and lay public. This has resulted a ‘gap’ between both groups as they use different assessment approaches and visualization tools. Due to the rapid change of information communication technology (ICT) and computer graphic visualization, there is a possibility where visual perception between both groups has changed. Apart from this, there is also a possibility where visual perception between experts and lay public may have a distinguishing equivalence especially on the visual perception ‘decision’. This research starts with a critical review on VIA approaches based on theories and existing research implementation of VIA. It then continues with surveys of the visual perception between the experts and lay public on the landscape aspects of the urban streetscape and visualization tools used in VIA.
format Thesis
qualification_name Doctor of Philosophy (PhD.)
qualification_level Doctorate
author Mat Rani, Ruzaimi
author_facet Mat Rani, Ruzaimi
author_sort Mat Rani, Ruzaimi
title A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
title_short A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
title_full A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
title_fullStr A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
title_full_unstemmed A study of consensus for Visual Impact Assessment of urban streetscape
title_sort study of consensus for visual impact assessment of urban streetscape
granting_institution Multimedia University
granting_department Faculty of Creative Multimedia
publishDate 2011
_version_ 1747829624355684352