Knowledge Atlas on the Relationship between Urban Street Space and Residents’ Health—A Bibliometric Analysis Based on VOSviewer and CiteSpace
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Every city in the western world, more or less, has the characteristics of ‘Coketown’. The main creativity of the 19th century produced an extremely deteriorating urban environment that has never been achieved before; because even the ruling class settlements were polluted and very crowded. Indeed, the richest and most ’advanced’ metropolises don’t even have enough sunshine and fresh air to build basic things that are indispensable to life, but backward villages still have these things.[5]
- The continuous emergence of new technologies and methods provides new possibilities for research;
- How to consider other disciplines so that the research content can be an effective system for solving problems.
2. Data Sources and Methods
2.1. Data Sources
2.2. Research Method
3. Analysis of Developments in Research Fields
3.1. Literature Development Trends
3.2. Country and Research Institute Analysis
4. Theme and Domain Co-occurrence Analysis
4.1. Keywords Co-occurrence
4.2. Domain Co-occurrence
5. Co-cited
6. Knowledge Topic Identification and Landmark Literature Analysis
6.1. Knowledge Topic Recognition
6.2. Analysis of Street Space and Residents’ Health Evolution Based on Iconic Literature
7. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research Categories and Elements | Research Method | Relevant Research Contents | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Positive correlation between urban street space and residents’ health | Natural Environment | temperature, plants and geographical location | sensor measurement, ENVI-met model, literature meta analysis | Psychological restoration and physical activity to explain the health promoting value of green space [42,43]; Regional climate change [44]; Living away from green spaces may increase the risk of obesity [45]; High-albedo materials [46]; The sky view factor (SVF), significantly affects outdoor thermal environments [47,48]; Google Street View (GSV), urban greenery assessment tool [49,50];Three mechanisms through which greenery might exert its positive effect on health: stress reduction, stimulating physical activity and facilitating social cohesion [51,52,53]. |
Economic Environment | economic level and house price of different cities | a topological network model, space syntax re- search, questionnaire investigation | Balancing the interests of all parties (local governments, different community groups, real estate developers, environmental advocates) [35]; The concept of Street-based Local Area (SLA), SLA associate with house price [39]; By estimating network accessibility variables across a variety of spatial scales, Evaluate the relationship between urban allocation and real estate price; Urban Street centrality and densities of commercial and service activities [54]. | |
Physical Space Environment | transportation, street grid, built environment | computational fluid dynamics (CFD), standard ke3 turbulence model, micro-meteorological measurement, ENVI-met model, space syntax | The influence of thermal comfort of urban outdoor space environment on pedestrians [55,56]; Geometric elements and physical properties are related to microclimate and thermal comfort parameters as well as data from different climatic regions [32]; Long-street models [57]; The urban air permeability in the urban canopy is closely related to the building density [58]; A small building arrangement and pollutant dispersion in street canyons [59,60,61]; Environmental sensitivity and heat island intensity in high-density cities [62,63]; The betweenness centrality (BC) of nodes in large complex networks [64]; Planners and community police, the quality of life in urban neighborhoods [65]; The large urban street networks form small-world networks [66,67]; Cognitive space, metric space, spatial topological [68]; Built environment space perception [69]. | |
Social Environment | gender, age, gentrification of land, environmental justice | salivary cortisol data, sampling survey | Measurement of salivary cortisol was used as a basis for exploring the relationship between happiness and green space [34]; The degree of urbanity and level of income deprivation [70]; The association between greenery filled public areas that are nearby a residence and easy to walk in and the longevity of senior citizens in a densely populated, developed megacity [71,72]; The obesity epidemic in minority children [73];Ethno-racially differentiated [74,75,76]; The relationship between children’s health and community, green plants and sports activities [77]; The time of outdoor activities are influenced by regional culture [78]. |
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Meng, L.; Wen, K.-H.; Brewin, R.; Wu, Q. Knowledge Atlas on the Relationship between Urban Street Space and Residents’ Health—A Bibliometric Analysis Based on VOSviewer and CiteSpace. Sustainability 2020, 12, 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12062384
Meng L, Wen K-H, Brewin R, Wu Q. Knowledge Atlas on the Relationship between Urban Street Space and Residents’ Health—A Bibliometric Analysis Based on VOSviewer and CiteSpace. Sustainability. 2020; 12(6):2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12062384
Chicago/Turabian StyleMeng, Lingchao, Kuo-Hsun Wen, Richard Brewin, and Qiong Wu. 2020. "Knowledge Atlas on the Relationship between Urban Street Space and Residents’ Health—A Bibliometric Analysis Based on VOSviewer and CiteSpace" Sustainability 12, no. 6: 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12062384
APA StyleMeng, L., Wen, K. -H., Brewin, R., & Wu, Q. (2020). Knowledge Atlas on the Relationship between Urban Street Space and Residents’ Health—A Bibliometric Analysis Based on VOSviewer and CiteSpace. Sustainability, 12(6), 2384. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12062384