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Brain, Body, Architecture Research (BBAR)

Brain, Body, Architecture Research (BBAR) is an interdisciplinary group of researchers working with inspiration from architecture, neuroscience, urban design, urban mobilities, and sociology in order to explore the basic question: How does the mobile human being experience and sense the contemporary city?

Brain, Body, Architecture Research (BBAR)

Brain, Body, Architecture Research (BBAR) is an interdisciplinary group of researchers working with inspiration from architecture, neuroscience, urban design, urban mobilities, and sociology in order to explore the basic question: How does the mobile human being experience and sense the contemporary city?

The built environment affects human beings

BBAR envision our cities and architecture to integrate the built environment with the mobile human being in a socially and mentally sustainable manner. To achieve this, we aim to advance our understanding of how movement within the built environment affects:

  • human experience
  • human sensation
  • health and everyday wellbeing.

For instance, how human experiences and their related mentally felt states correspond to (neuro-) physiological responses and vice versa during interaction with the city.

By exploring neuroscientific theoretical frameworks and interdisciplinary methodological strategies, we aim to highlight how psychobiological and sociocultural approaches to urban mobilities can advance the design sciences.

The holistic and interdisciplinary approach to the interaction between mobile human beings and cities aims to develop new knowledge for the design of future cities and architecture

Neural origin of human interaction with city and architecture

In time, human perception of cities and architectural spaces have facilitated situations that afford specific behaviours and experiences by acting as a backdrop. It is necessary to discover how several overlapping perceptual and behavioural phenomena that are expressed in senses, affect, feelings, and cultural norms, contribute to the outcome.

Our purpose is to discover these effects and their underlying neural origin of human interaction with the city and architectural spaces from an interdisciplinary perspective. We believe that relating to the built environment is fundamental to human beings and therefore expressed in both the body, brain, and behaviour.

We apply a high-resolution approach by integrating and combining ‘classic’ and qualitative urban and mobile ethnographic methods, with neuroscientific methods to correlate behaviour and experience.

By exploring neuroscientific theoretical frameworks and interdisciplinary methodological strategies, we aim to highlight how psychobiological and sociocultural approaches to urban mobilities can advance the design sciences.

Zakaria Djebbara
Research Group leader
Brain, Body, Architecture Research (BBAR)
zadj@create.aau.dk
28715556