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Alasdair Turner

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Alasdair Turner
Patrick Alasdair Fionn Turner
Born(1969-10-19)October 19, 1969
London, England
DiedOctober 6, 2011(2011-10-06) (aged 41)
Alma materUniversity of Cambridge (MA)
University of Edinburgh (MSc)
Known forVisibility graph analysis, UCL Depthmap
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science, Space syntax, Architectural computing

Patrick Alasdair Fionn Turner (19 October 1969 – 6 October 2011) was a British computer scientist and academic. He was a prominent figure at the VR Centre for the Built Environment and the Space Group at University College London (UCL). Turner's research significantly influenced the development of space syntax theory, particularly through his work on dynamic agent models and spatial analysis.

Education and early career

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Turner was born on 19 October 1969 in London. He earned a Master of Arts in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge and a Master of Science in Artificial Intelligence from the University of Edinburgh. In 2011, he was appointed a Reader in Urban and Architectural Computing at University College London.

Research and contributions

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Turner's research focused on the intersection of architecture, urban design, and the underlying computational systems of socio-physical environments. He developed models centered on the "structural coupling" between human agents and their background environment.

Agent-based modeling

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Turner proposed that human movement patterns consist of two distinct types:

  • Natural movement: A product of an agent's visual field and the spatial affordances of the built environment.
  • Navigational movement: Learned patterns where agents retrieve spatial memory to reach specific destinations.

He implemented neural network methods to control agent behavior, aiming to create an "Ecomorphic" model where collective movement patterns and environmental formation share a reciprocal relationship.[1] Working with Alan Penn, he introduced the concept of "exosomatic visual architecture," a paradigm where environmental configurations outside the body guide cognitive movement decisions.[2]

Visibility graph analysis and Depthmap

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Building upon the space syntax theory established by Bill Hillier and Julienne Hanson, Turner introduced visibility graph analysis (VGA) alongside Alan Penn, David O'Sullivan, and Maria Doxa.[3] VGA represents space as intervisibility relationships within a grid, allowing for more granular analysis than traditional axial lines.

Turner authored the UCL Depthmap software, an open-source platform that integrated space syntax methods with his agent-based models. Depthmap became a primary tool for researchers in the field of urban morphology.[4]

Teaching and art

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Turner was the founder of the MSc in Adaptive Architecture and Computation at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. He was an early adopter of the Processing programming language for architectural and creative design. His interests often overlapped with generative art and code explorations.

Death

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Turner died on 6 October 2011 following a long struggle with stomach cancer.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Turner, A. (2003). "Analysing the visual dynamics of spatial morphology". Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design. 30 (5): 657–676. doi:10.1068/b12962.
  2. ^ Turner, A., 2007a. "The ingredients of an exosomatic cognitive map: Isovists, agents and axial lines?". In: Hoelscher, C., Conroy Dalton, R., Turner, A. (Eds.), Space Syntax and Spatial Cognition. Universitaet Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
  3. ^ Turner, A.; Doxa, M.; O'Sullivan, D.; Penn, A. (2001). "From isovists to visibility graphs: a methodology for the analysis of architectural space". Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design. 28 (1): 103–121. doi:10.1068/b2684.
  4. ^ Turner, A. (2001) Depthmap: a program to perform visibility graph analysis. In Proceedings 3rd International Symposium on Space Syntax pp. 31.1–31.9
  5. ^ Stonor, Tim (7 October 2011). "Alasdair Turner". Space Syntax.
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