Behavioural Geography
From Geography
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Behavioural Geography is an ideology/approach that makes use of the methods and assumptions of behavourism to determine the cognitive processes involved in an individuals perception of, and/or response and reaction to their environment. The theory focuses on the coginitive processes underlying spatial reasoning, decision making and behaviour. | Behavioural Geography is an ideology/approach that makes use of the methods and assumptions of behavourism to determine the cognitive processes involved in an individuals perception of, and/or response and reaction to their environment. The theory focuses on the coginitive processes underlying spatial reasoning, decision making and behaviour. | ||
- | Due the lack of a theoritical base this theory was left open to critique | + | Due the lack of a theoritical base this theory was left open to critique, although behavioural geography incorporates a number of concerns which are still influential in much geographical thinking: |
+ | - ''Perceptions'' people hold of hazards and environments | ||
+ | - ''Mental maps'' people have of the spaces and places around them | ||
+ | - The everyday ''spatial preferences'' people display in occupying or utilising certain spaces and places rather than others | ||
+ | |||
*''Page created by Paul van den Hogen -- [[PaulHogen|PaulHogen]] 15:15, 24 September 2012 | *''Page created by Paul van den Hogen -- [[PaulHogen|PaulHogen]] 15:15, 24 September 2012 | ||
+ | *''page enhanced by Niek van Enckevort --[[NiekVanEnckevort|NiekVanEnckevort]] 15:40, 23 October 2012 |
Revision as of 13:44, 23 October 2012
Behavioural Geography is an ideology/approach that makes use of the methods and assumptions of behavourism to determine the cognitive processes involved in an individuals perception of, and/or response and reaction to their environment. The theory focuses on the coginitive processes underlying spatial reasoning, decision making and behaviour. Due the lack of a theoritical base this theory was left open to critique, although behavioural geography incorporates a number of concerns which are still influential in much geographical thinking:
- Perceptions people hold of hazards and environments - Mental maps people have of the spaces and places around them - The everyday spatial preferences people display in occupying or utilising certain spaces and places rather than others
- Page created by Paul van den Hogen -- PaulHogen 15:15, 24 September 2012
- page enhanced by Niek van Enckevort --NiekVanEnckevort 15:40, 23 October 2012