logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Developing a Citizen Social Science approach to understand urban stress and promote wellbeing in urban communities

Interdisciplinary Studies

Developing a Citizen Social Science approach to understand urban stress and promote wellbeing in urban communities

J. Pykett, B. Chrisinger, et al.

This research investigates the complexities of urban stress through a Citizen Social Science lens, utilizing innovative mobile technologies. Conducted by a team of experts including Jessica Pykett and Benjamin Chrisinger, this study highlights the ethical and conceptual challenges in measuring urban emotions, aiming to enhance community wellbeing.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
This paper sets out the future potential and challenges for developing an interdisciplinary, mixed-method Citizen Social Science approach to researching urban emotions. It focuses on urban stress, which is increasingly noted as a global mental health challenge facing both urbanised and rapidly urbanising societies. The paper reviews the existing use of mobile psychophysiological or biosensing within urban environments—as means of ‘capturing’ the urban geographies of emotions. Methodological reflections are included on primary research using biosensing in a study of workplace and commuter stress for university employees in Birmingham (UK) and Salzburg (Austria) for illustrative purposes. In comparing perspectives on the conceptualisation and measurement of urban stress from psychology, neuroscience and urban planning, the difficulties of defining scientific constructs within Citizen Science are discussed to set out the groundwork for fostering interdisciplinary dialogue. The novel methods, geo-located sensor technologies and data-driven approaches to researching urban stress now available to researchers pose a number of ethical, political and conceptual challenges around defining and measuring emotions, stress, human behaviour and urban space. They also raise issues of rigour, participation and social scientific interpretation. Introducing methods informed by more critical Citizen Social Science perspectives can temper overly individualised forms of data collection to establish more effective ways of addressing urban stress and promoting wellbeing in urban communities.
Publisher
Palgrave Communications
Published On
May 06, 2020
Authors
Jessica Pykett, Benjamin Chrisinger, Kalliopi Kyriakou, Tess Osborne, Bernd Resch, Afroditi Stathi, Eszter Toth, Anna C. Whittaker
Tags
urban stress
Citizen Social Science
emotions
biosensing technologies
workplace stress
methodological reflections
wellbeing
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny