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Léon van Berlo / Jos van Leeuwen

The Neighbourhood Wizard Cause and effect of changes in urban neighbourhoods. Léon van Berlo / Jos van Leeuwen. Agenda. Introduction Objective Approach (Experiencing) Liveability Data Collection Knowledge representation Prototype Evaluation and testing Conclusions and future work

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Léon van Berlo / Jos van Leeuwen

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  1. The Neighbourhood Wizard Cause and effect of changes in urban neighbourhoods Léon van Berlo / Jos van Leeuwen

  2. Agenda • Introduction • Objective • Approach • (Experiencing) Liveability • Data Collection • Knowledge representation • Prototype • Evaluation and testing • Conclusions and future work • Coffee break

  3. Introduction • Quality of the neighbourhood (physical and social)  Increasingly important • Local initiatives for neighbourhood improvement • Municipalities support these initiatives Citizen participation • Issues: • Inhabitants focus on their own problems (not the ones from their neighbours) • Inhabitants don’t see the complex dependencies of a decision • Inhabitants give concrete proposals for change in stead of their desire

  4. Objective • Making citizens realise what the consequences are of their ideas for changes • By developing a tool that allows citizens to: • propose changes to their neighbourhood; • assess the quality of these changes

  5. Approach • Find a set of indicators for experience of liveability of the neighbourhood • Find a set of characteristics that affect the liveability • Determine a BBN that represents the knowledge • Build a prototype • Narrowing its scope to the plaza type of habitat • Testing the prototype in the Dutch city of ’s‑Hertogenbosch

  6. Experiencing liveability:Leidelmeijer and Marsman 1999

  7. Example experience by an individual Appreciation Importance Satisfaction Characteristics Liveability

  8. Example experience by an individual

  9. Example experience by an individual

  10. Experience by another individual

  11. Grouping individuals and their needs Wishprofiles: • Teenagers • Yuppies • Families • Elderly • Handicapped (elderly) Aspects: • Space • Liveliness • Security • Quality • Status • Traffic

  12. Data Collection • Questionnaire of liveability regarding the city of ’s‑Hertogenbosch • Experiences of characteristics such as: • ‘public furnishing’ • ‘available facilities’ • ‘public accessibility’ • ‘status’ • ‘appearance’ • ‘ambiance’ • etc. • For plazas, over 40 characteristics were included. • Scale of seven possible values • Ranging from deficient, through moderate and neutral, to ample and excessive.

  13. Data Collection Example: Form and function: Incoherent Suitable surprising conflicting

  14. Knowledge Representation • Bayesian Network: • Can deal with uncertainty and interdependent variables • Determining the structure of a BN: • 1) Knowledge expert who constructs a network • 2) Examining data from the particular domain • In this project 2 is used to come to a base network which was refined by 1.

  15. Structural Learning • Hugin (www.hugin.com) was used with: • PC algorithm (Peter & Clark) • NPC algorithm (Necessary Path Condition) • Constraint-based learning algorithms • Derive conditional independence and dependence statements by performing statistical tests on pairs of variables in the data set

  16. BN Structure (1)

  17. Structural Learning • PC and NPC  same results • Significance level 0.05 – 0.03 – 0.01 • Difference in ‘real relationships’ and ‘relationships in the data’ • Defining relations that are not in the data: no use

  18. BN Structure (2)

  19. Prototype • User-interaction focused on a task assigned to the user • Users can experience this like a game • Representing the effects of changes • Representing the desired states of the aspects for different sections of the population • Availability of the system on Internet • Easy to use interface and obvious navigation

  20. Changing elements: • Three ways: • 1) Drawing • 2) Picking from a list • 3) Cheating

  21. Changing elements: 1 (drawing)

  22. Changing elements: 2 (picking from a list)

  23. Changing elements: 3 (cheating)

  24. Presentation of Predicted Effects • Three levels: • 1) Simple  does not give desired effect • 2) Normal • 3) Expert

  25. Presentation of Predicted Effects: 2 (normal)

  26. Presentation of Predicted Effects: 2 (normal)

  27. Presentation of Predicted Effects: 3 (expert)

  28. Presentation of Predicted Effects: 3 (expert)

  29. Evaluation • www.WijkWizard.nl (dutch) • Tested and evaluated by inhabitants of the city of ’s‑Hertogenbosch. • Online evaluation form. • “Thanks to the Neighbourhood Wizard, I now see that certain ideas are positive for me, but negative for other members of our community” : 7.4 • “The Neighbourhood Wizard shows me that changes can have positive effects on one aspect, but negative effects on other aspects” : 7.0 • Confirmed the educational function of the prototype!

  30. Conclusions (+) • The Neighbourhood Wizard helps users to see that certain ideas are positive for them, but negative for other sections of the population; • The Neighbourhood Wizard shows users that changes can have positive effects on one aspect, but negative effects on other aspects; • The Neighbourhood Wizard helps users to realize the complexity of a design task and as a result users will have a better informed view on plan proposals and probably a higher appreciation of plans.

  31. Conclusions (-) • Design of the user interface • Navigation structure (too many clicks) • Abstract terms • Inclusion of more concrete elements (number of parking lots) can help take away long-living irritations that inhabitants may have • The data collection is restricted to physical characteristics

  32. Future work • Investigate the relations between characteristics in depth • (developing a technique that) Includes explanations of the effects • In some cases the predictions are not so obvious and require further explanation For example: The creation of a quiet plaza has negative effects on the safety of the plaza. This is not a logical, though correct, prediction because the quietness of a plaza will attract criminal behaviour

  33. Thank you • Questions or coffee break? Leon.vanBerlo@tno.nl / WijkWizard.nl j.p.v.leeuwen@tue.nl / www.ddss.nl

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