Attention in Urban Foraging

Malcolm McCullough
pp. 27-36, download
(https://doi.org/10.55612/s-5002-016-003)

Abstract

This position paper argues how there has to be much more to smart city learning than just wayshowing, and something better as augmented reality than covering the world with instructions. Attention has become something for many people to know better in
an age of information superabundance. Embodied cognition explains how the workings of attention are not solely a foreground task, as if attention is something to pay. As digital media appear in ever more formats and contexts, their hybrids with physical form increasing influence how habitual engagement with persistent situations creates learning. Ambient information can just add to the distraction by multitasking, or it can support more favorable processes of shifting among different kinds of information with a particular intent. As one word for this latter process, foraging deserves more consideration in smart city learning.

keywords: attention, embodiment, habit, foraging, form, situation, architecture.

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