Abstract | ||
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People are able to detect up to 1 trillion odors. Yet, city planning is concerned only with a few bad odors, mainly because odors are currently captured only through complaints made by urban dwellers. To capture both good and bad odors, we resort to a methodology that has been recently proposed and relies on tagging information of geo-referenced pictures. In doing so for the cities of London and Barcelona, this work makes three new contributions. We study 1) how the urban smellscape changes in time and space; 2) which emotions people share at places with specific smells; and 3) what is the color of a smell, if it exists. Without social media data, insights about those three aspects have been difficult to produce in the past, further delaying the creation of urban restorative experiences. |
Year | Venue | DocType |
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2016 | ICWSM | Conference |
Volume | Citations | PageRank |
abs/1605.06721 | 1 | 0.35 |
References | Authors | |
12 | 3 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Daniele Quercia | 1 | 1618 | 103.55 |
Luca Maria Aiello | 2 | 713 | 44.77 |
Rossano Schifanella | 3 | 619 | 35.44 |