3.8 Review

Human wayfinding behaviour and metrics in complex environments: a systematic literature review

Journal

ARCHITECTURAL SCIENCE REVIEW
Volume 64, Issue 5, Pages 452-463

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00038628.2020.1777386

Keywords

Complex environments; navigation behaviour; wayfinding metrics; spatial factors; wayfinding technologies; wayfinding aids

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Funding

  1. UGC Funding Scheme from The Hong Kong Polytechnic University [RL6A]

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This study systematically reviewed various factors affecting wayfinding behavior in complex environments, focusing on university campus wayfinding, environment complexity, signage design, and cultural differences. The paper also discussed the technological contributions of virtual and augmented reality in the exploration of wayfinding behavior.
The university campuses situated in metropolitan city centres have morphed into complex environments due to congested layout and high-rise buildings. The environmental legibility for wayfinding within these environments is a great matter of concern. These environments have a significant visual absence of dedicated traditional cues for pedestrian navigation, such as distinguishable intersections, dedicated pathways, and information signage. This study presents a systematic review of various factors affecting wayfinding behaviour in complex environments. Five keywords including 'university campus wayfinding', 'cross-cultural wayfinding', 'virtual wayfinding', 'signage pictograms' and 'unfamiliar environment wayfinding' have been formulated from research questions. The articles have been searched in four most relevant research databases. Out of 4257, twenty-seven articles have been selected. Factors such as environment complexity, wayfinding metrics, environmental familiarity, experimental settings, signage design, and cultural differences are critically discussed. This paper also discusses the technological contributions of virtual and augmented reality in the exploration of wayfinding behaviour.

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