Abstract
The study of complex societies, in particular urban spaces such as those of the ancient Maya, can effectively focus on the human interactions and entanglements that animated such locales. Further, many of the concerns related to crowd dispersal, pedestrian traffic patterns, the constitution of community, and socio-spatial control that underlay spatial analyses of modern urban centres were equally valid in past, non-Western, urban centres. From space syntax to agent simulation and crowd modelling, this paper adopts a methodological ‘train of thought’ with origins well outside the archaeological mainstream that may be applied in the creation of explanatory/exploratory models for socio-spatial interaction. Within Maya studies (and indeed, other ancient contexts), these models may be profitably invoked to direct research toward a deeper understanding of how the ancient Maya may have actually lived within the monumental built environments that so strongly define them in both popular and professional consciousness. The unit of analysis in all such approaches is the plano-metric representation of architecture and space. In concert with the other papers presented in this volume, particular attention is focused on the analytical consequences (both opportunities and limitations) of such mapping. The Classic Period centre of Copan, Honduras, has been adopted as a case study.
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- 1.
If your imaginary room were directly connected to three rooms by four or five doors (or 52 doors for that matter), the room would still have a connectivity of 3.
- 2.
In Hillier (1996), this measure is referred to as “mean depth”; however, the term is somewhat confused in the literature and as such, we have chosen instead the term “total depth” while the analysis remains the same.
- 3.
The analysis was conducted using a program called Depthmap, available for free academic download on the Space Syntax Laboratory website (www.spacesyntax.org).
- 4.
Agent movement, in this case, is non-purposive (i.e. not goal oriented). Agents simply explore the urban grid of Copan for the duration of the analysis rather than trying to move from any particular space to any other.
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Morton, S.G., Peuramaki-Brown, M.M., Dawson, P.C., Seibert, J.D. (2014). Peopling the Past: Interpreting Models for Pedestrian Movement in Ancient Civic-Ceremonial Centres. In: Rau, S., Schönherr, E. (eds) Mapping Spatial Relations, Their Perceptions and Dynamics. Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00993-3_3
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