The role of the built environment in supporting social interaction and social well-being
Project description
The doctoral research of Taiyo Ishikawa investigates how built-environment exposures across activity spaces shape multiple forms of social interaction, including low-intensity social contact (e.g.,casual greeting with baristas/shop staff) and high-intensity social contact (e.g., meeting close friends/new people), and how these interactions relate to social well-being. It also examines the role of travel behavior in these relationships, recognizing that mobility patterns can enable or constrain opportunities for social interaction. This dissertation conceptualizes social well-being with particular attention to loneliness and social isolation as key subjective and objective outcomes, respectively. Clarifying these pathways is essential for advancing evidence-based urban planning for socially sustainable cities and for addressing loneliness and social isolation as emerging public health challenges.
Research themes
Active living and urban lifestyles
Project details
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Start date:March 1, 2025
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End date:February 28, 2029
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Location:Aalto University
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Funded by:Japan government
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Objectives:
Project contact
Taiyo Ishikawa