Friday, May 31, 2019
Garden Design for the Blind :: Architecture Design Essays
Garden Design for the BlindIt is a commonly known fact that the removal of one sense sharpens and enhances the perception of the others. We as humans are very centered on sight, and we tend to give less weight to our other senses when it comes to perceiving the field around us. For the most part, our environment tends to consist of designs made for us to experience visually. We do recognize sound as important, but when we are not actively listening to music or speech, sound tends to fade into the background. While we dont really notice its there, sound serves to give us many another(prenominal) clues about our surroundings. Our sense of touch is also important in many ways. We can use it actively, feeling many aspects of the world around us a simple touch can read the temperature, surface texture, and hardness, among other things, of an object in our surroundings. We also possess a sense of kinesthesia, which involves cues from our muscles that give us breeding about the way our bodies are moving through space. An important component of this system is our balance system in our middle ear. This lets us know when we are or are not in a vertical position. Our leg muscles can tell us the conditions of the surface upon which we are walking and how far we gravel traveled. Easily the most overlooked sense is the sense of smell. Most of us rarely think about it, but studies have shown that of all the external stimuli that continue the way we do things, odor might be the biggest influence on our behavior. Scent is a major component of memory, especially of pleasant memories. A pant of a particular smell, perhaps lavender, might bring back memories of weekends at Grandmas house, where the linen closet was scented with lavender sachets. Studies have link changes in emotion and even basic instincts to our sense of smell.The French have a restaurant called dans le noir? (or in the dark?) in which seeing pot get an experience that is almost like bei ng blind. They are guided to a table by waiters, some blind and some sighted they fertilize their entire meal in the complete darkness. The principle behind this is that in the absence of sight, all the other senses are heightened.
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