TY - GEN N2 - Turner and Penn introduced the notion of integration of isovist fields as a means to understand such fields syntactically - as a set of components with a structural relationship to a global whole (1999). This research was further refined to put forward the concept of visibility graph analysis (VGA) as a tool for architectural analysis (Turner, Doxa, O?sullivan, & Penn, 2001), which has become widely used. We suggest a complementary method of characterising place that does not make use of integration or a graph yet which allows - as visibility graph analysis does - discrete view points to be dimensioned in relation to a set of such viewpoints. In our method, Principal Component Analysis (PCA), a statistical technique, is employed to infer salient characteristics of a set of views and then to situate these component views within a low dimensional space in order to compare the extent to which each view corresponds to these characteristics. We demonstrate the method by reference to two distinct urban areas with differing spatial characteristics. Because PCA operates on vectors, order of the data has important implications. We consider some of these implications including view orientation and chirality (handedness) and assess the variance of results with regard to these factors. ID - discovery1472823 UR - http://www.sss10.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/category/07-environmental-and-spatial-cognition/ PB - Space Syntax Laboratory, The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London CY - London, United Kingdom T3 - International Space Syntax Symposium A1 - Davis, A A1 - Hanna, S A1 - Aish, F KW - Isovist KW - place KW - classification. TI - Characterising Place by Scene Depth AV - public SP - 120:1 Y1 - 2015/07/17/ EP - 120:15 N1 - This version is the version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions. Copyright © Space Syntax Laboratory, UCL, 2015. ER -