Adler, K.1989: The suburban, the modern, and ‘une dame de passy'. The Oxford Art Journal, 12 (1), 3–13.
2.
Aitken, S.C.1983: Residential cognition, search, and evaluation: a humanistic perspective and empirical validation. Ontario Geography21, 67–84.
3.
Aitken, S.C.1984: Normative views and ordering the urban milieu. The East Lakes Geographer19, 1–15.
4.
Aitken, S.C.1985: Behavioural geography: interviews on the cutting edge. Ohio Geographers: Recent Research Themes13, 3–22.
5.
Aitken, S.C.1986a: A phenomonology of caving. The Canadian Caver18, 26–29.
6.
Aitken, S.C.1986b: Behavioural geography: diversity and directions. Ohio Geographers: Recent Research Themes14, 85–88.
7.
Aitken, S.C.1987a: Evaluative criteria and social distinctions amongst renters' residential search procedures. The Canadian Geographer31, 114–26.
8.
Aitken, S.C.1987b: Households moving within the rental sector: mental schemata and search spaces. Environment and Planning A19, 369–83.
9.
Aitken, S.C.1990: Local evaluations of neighborhood change. Annals of the Association of American Geographers80, 247–67.
10.
Aitken, S.C. and Bjorklund, E.M.1988: Transactional and transformational theories in behavioural geography. The Professional Geographer40, 54–64.
11.
Aitken, S.C. and Sell, J.L.1989: People and paradigms. In Hardie, G., Moore, R. and Sanoff, H., editors, Changing paradigms, Papers and Proceedings of the Environmental Design Research Association 20, Wisconsin: Omnipress, 68–74.
12.
Aitken, S.C, Cutter, S.L., Foote, K.E. and Sell, J.L.1989: Environmental perception and behavioural geography. In Willmott, G. and Gaile, G., editors, Geography in America, Columbus Ohio: Merrill Publishing Co., 218–38.
13.
Ajzen, I. and Fishbein, M.1980: Understanding attitude and predicting social behaviour. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
14.
Alba, J.W. and Hasher, L.1983: Is memory schematic?. Psychological Bulletin93, 203–31.
15.
Altman, I. and Rogoff, B.1987: World views in psychology: trait, interactional, organismic, and transactional perspectives. In Stokols, D. and Alt-man, I., editors, Handbook of environmental psychology Volume 1, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1–40.
16.
Anderson, J.R.1983: The architecture of cognition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
17.
Anderson, N.1974: Information integration theory: a survey. In Krantz, D., Atkinson, R. and Luce, R., editors, Contemporary developments in mathematical psychology, San Francisco: W.H. Freeman, 236–301.
18.
Armstrong, M.P., De, S., Densham, P.J., Lolonis, P., Rushton, G. and Tewari, V.K.1990: A knowledge-based approach for supporting locational decision making.. Environment and Planning A17, in press.
19.
Bandura, A.1982: Self-efficacy mechanism in human agency. American Psychologist37, 122–47.
20.
Bandura, A.1986: Social foundations of thought and action: a social cognitive theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
21.
Bandura, A. and Wood, R.1989: Effect of perceived controllability and performance standards on self-regulation of complex decision making. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology56, 805–14.
22.
Ben-Akiva, M. and Lerman, S.R.1985: Discrete choice analysis: theory and application to travel demand.Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
23.
Bowlby, S., Lewis, J., McDowell, L. and Foord, J.1989: The Geography of gender. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New models in geography, London: Unwin Hyman, 157–75.
24.
Brooker-Gross, S.R. and Maraffa, T.A.1985: Commuting distance and gender among nonmetropolitan university employees. The Professional Geographer37, 303–10.
25.
Brown, M.A. and Macey, S.M.1982: Understanding residential energy conservation through attitudes and beliefs. Environment and PlanningA 12, 175–86.
26.
Bunting, T.1983: Urbanism in children: how school-age children evaluate urban environments. Ontario Geography21, 3–28.
27.
Bunting, T.1986: Gender-related differences in the development of environmental dispositions. Ohio Geographers: Recent Research Themes14, 89–108.
28.
Bunting, T. and Guelke, L.1979: Behavioural and perceptual geography: a critical appraisal. Annals of the Association of American Geographers69, 448–62.
29.
Bunting, T. and Cousins, L.R.1983: Environmental personality in school-age children: development and application of the children's environmental response inventory. Journal of Environmental Education15, 3–10.
30.
Bunting, T. and Cousins, L.R.1985: Environmental dispositions among school-age children: a preliminary investigation. Environment and Behaviour17, 725–68.
31.
Buss, D.M. and Craik, K.H.1984: Acts, dispositions, and personality. In Maher, B.A. and Maher, W.B., editors, Progress in experimental personality research: normal personality processes Volume 13, New York: Academic Press.
32.
Cadwallader, M.1988: Urban geography and social theory. Urban Geography9, 227–52.
33.
Cox, K.R. and Golledge, R.G., editors, 1981: Behavioural problems in geography revisited. New York: Metheun.
34.
Couclclis, H.1986: A theoretical framework for alternative models of spatial decision and behaviour. Annals of the Association of American Geographers76, 95–113.
35.
Couclelis, H. and Golledge, R.G.1983: Analytic research, positivism, and behavioural geography.. Annals of the Association of American Geographers7395–113.
36.
Cutter, S.1981: Community concern for pollution: social and environmental influences. Environment and Behaviour13, 105–24.
37.
Cutter, S.1982: Residential satisfaction and the suburban homeowner. Urban Geography3, 315–27.
38.
Densham, P. and Rushton, G.1988: Decision support systems for locational planning. In Golledge, R.G. and Timmermans, H., editors, Behavioural modelling in geography and planning. London: Croom Helm, 56–90.
39.
Desbarats, J.1983: Spatial Choice and Constraints on Behaviour. Annals of the Association of American Geographers73, 340–57.
40.
Dunlap, R.E. and Van Licre, K.D.1984: Commitment to the dominant social paradigm and concern for environmental quality. The Social Science Quarterly65, 1013–2.
41.
Eagle, T.C.1988: Contextual effects in consumer behaviour. In Golledge, R.G. and Timmermans, H., editors, Behavioural modelling in geography and planning, London: Croom Helm, 229–324.
Eyles, J.1985: Senses of place. Warrington: Silverbrook Press.
44.
Eyles, J.1989: The geography of everyday life. In Gregory, D. and Walford, R., editors, Horizons in human geography. London: MacMillan.
45.
Faganini, J.1987: Daily commuting time: the stakes for working mothers in France. Transportation Research Record1135, 26–30.
46.
Fischer, M. and Nijkamp, P.1985: Developments in explanatory discrete spatial data and choice analysis. Progress in Human Geography9, 515–51.
47.
Fischoff, B., Svenson, O. and Slovic, P.1987: Active response to environment hazards: perceptions and decision-making. In Stokols, D. and Altman, I., editors, Handbook of environmental psychology, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1089–133.
48.
Fishbein, M. and Ajzen, I.1975: Belief, attitude, intention and behaviour. Reading, Mass: Addison Wesley.
49.
Foord, J. and Gregson, N.1986: Patriarchy: towards a reconceptualisation. Antipode6, 72–4.
50.
Gärling, T., Böök, A. and Lindberg, G.1984: Cognitive mapping of large-scale environments: the interrelationships of action plans, acquisition, and orientation. Environment and Behaviour16, 3–34.
51.
Gärling, T., Lindberg, E., Torell, G. and Evans, G.1991: From environmental to ecological cognition. In Gärling, T. and Evans, G.W., editors, Environment, cognition, and action: an integrative multidisciplinary approach, New York: Oxford University Press, in press.
52.
Gill, A. and Smith, G.1985: Residents' evaluative structures of northern Manitoba mining communities. The Canadian Geographer29, 17–30.
53.
Gold, J.R.1980: An introduction to behavioural geography.Oxford: Oxford University Press.
54.
Golledge, R.G.1982: Substantive and methodological aspects of the interface between geography and psychology. In Golledge, R.G. and Rayner, J., editors, Proximity and preference: problems in the multidimensional analysis of large data sets, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, x–xix.
55.
Golledge, R.G.1988: Science and humanism in geography: multiple languages in multiple realities. In Golledge, R.G., Couclelis, H. and Gould, P., editors, A common ground for search, Santa Barbara: The Geographical Press, 63–71.
Golledge, R.G. and Timmermans, H.1988: Behavioural modelling in geography and planning. London: Croom Helm.
58.
Golledge, R.G. and Timmermans, H.1990: Applications of behavioural research on spatial problems I: cognition. Progress in Human Geography14, 57–99.
59.
Golledge, R.G., Richardson, G., Rayner, J. and Parnicky, J.1983: The spatial competence of selected mentally retarded populations. In Pick H. and Acredolo, L., editors, Spatial orientation and spatial representation, New York: Plenum Press, 79–100.
60.
Goodey, B. and Gold, J.1987: Environmental perception: the relationship with urban design. Progress in Human Geography11, 126–133.
61.
Goodey, B. and Gold, J.1989: Environmental perception: the relationship with age. Progress in Human Geography13, 99–106.
62.
Guba, E.G.1990: The paradigm dialogue. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications.
63.
Gurin, P. and Brim, O.G. Jr.1984: Change in self in adulthood: the example of sense of control. In Baltes, P.B. and Brim, O.G. Jr., editors, Life-span development and behaviour, Volume 6, New York: Academic Press, 281–334.
64.
Hanson, S.1980: The importance of multipurpose journey to work in urban travel behaviour. Transportation9, 229–48.
65.
Hensher, D.A.1983: A sequential attribute dominance model of probabilistic choice. Transportation ResearchA 17, 215–8.
66.
Hensher, D.A. and Taylor, A.K.1983: Intraurban residential relocation choices for students: an empirical enquiry. Environment and PlanningA 15, 815–30.
67.
Holcomb, B.1984: Women in the rebuilt urban environment: the United Stated experience. Built environment10, 18–24.
68.
Holcomb, B.1986: Geography and urban women. Urban Geography7, 448–56.
69.
Hudson, R.1980: Personal construct theory, the repertory grid method, and human geography. Progress in Human Geography4, 346–59.
70.
Husbands, W.1986: Leisure activity resources formation in periphery resorts: The response of tourists and residents in Barbados.. Canadian Geographer30, 24349.
71.
Johnson, J.H.1986: A model of evacuation decisionmaking in a nuclear reactor emergency. Geographical Review76, 405–18.
72.
Kelly, G.1955: A theory of personality: the psychology of personal constructs. New York: W.W. Norton and Company.
73.
Kelly, G.1970: A brief introduction to personal construct theory. In Bannister, D., editor, Perspectives in Personal Construct TheoryLondon: Academic Press.
74.
Kelman, H.C.1974: Attitudes are alive and well and gainfully employed in the sphere of action. American Psychologist28, 310–24.
75.
Kobayashi, A. and Mackenzie, S.1989: Remaking human geography.Boston: Unwin Hyman.
76.
Lefcourt, H.M., editor, 1981: Research with the locus of control construct Volume 1. New York: Academic Press.
77.
Leff, H.L., Gordon, G.R. and Ferguson, J.G.1974: Cognitive sets and environmental awareness. Environment and Behaviour6, 395–447.
78.
Leff, H.L. and Gordon, G.R.1979: Environmental cognitive sets: a longitudinal study. Environment and Behaviour11, 291–327.
79.
Lewin, K.1951: Problems of research in social psychology. In Lewin, E., editor, Field theory in social science, New York: Harper, 159–69.
80.
Ley, D.1989: Fragmentation, coherence and limits to theory. In Kobyashi, A. and MacKenzie, S., editors, Remaking human geography, Boston: Unwin Hyman, 227–44.
81.
Little, B.R.1987: Personality and the environment. In Stokols, D. and Altman, I., editors, Handbook of environmental psychology, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 205–44.
82.
Longley, P.1984: Discrete choice modelling and complex spatial choice: an overview. In Bahrenberg, S.G., Fischer, M.M. and Nijkamp, P., editors, Recent development in spatial data analysis, Aldershot: Gover, 375–93.
83.
Longstreth, M., Turner, J., Topliff, M. and Iams, D.1989: Support for soft and hard path American energy policies: does gender play a role?. Women's Studies International Forum12, 213–26.
Louviere, J. and Meyer, R.1976: A model for residential impression formation. Geographical Analysis8, 479–86.
86.
Louviere, J. and Hensher, D.1982: Design and analysis of simulated choices or allocation experiments in travel choice modelling. Transportation Research Record890, 11–17.
87.
Louviere, J. and Gaeth, G.1987: Decomposing the determinants of retail facility choice using the method of hierarchical information integration: a supermarket illustration. Journal of Retailing63, 25–48.
88.
Lowe, J. and Pederson, E.1983: Human geography: an integrated approach. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
89.
Luce, R.1959: Individual choice behaviour. New York: John Wiley and Sons.
90.
Macey, S.M. and Brown, M.A.1983: Residential energy conservation: the role of past experience in repetitive household behaviour. Environment and Behaviour15, 123–42.
91.
Mackenzie, S.1988: Balancing our space and time: The impact of women's organization on the British city. In Little, J., Peake, L. and Richardson, P., editors, Women in cities: gender and the urban environment, London: MacMillan, 41–60.
92.
Mackett, R.L. and Johnson, I.1985: Residential search behaviour: the implication of survey and analytical design. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie76, 173–9.
93.
Marston, S.A.1988: Urban growth, neighbourhoods, and the changing dynamics of political arrangements. Discussion Paper No. 88–6, Department of Geography, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
94.
Marston, S.A. and Saint-Germaine, M.1990: Urban restructuring and the emergence of new political groupings: women and neighbourhood activism in Tucson, Arizona, USA. Geoforum, forthcoming.
95.
McClelland, D.C.1981: Is personality consistent? In Rabin, I., Aronoff, A., Barclay, M. and Zucker, R.A., editors, Further explorations in personality, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 87–113.
96.
McHugh, K.1984: Explaining intentions and destination selection. The Professional Geographer36, 315–26.
97.
McKechnie, G.E.1974: Manual for the environmental response inventory. Palo Alto, CA: Consulting Psychological Press.
98.
McKechnie, G.E.1977: The environmental response inventory in application. Environment and Behaviour9, 255–276.
99.
McKechnie, G.E.1978: Environmental dispositions: Concepts and measures. In McReynolds, P., editor, Advances in psychological assessment. Volume 4, San Francisco: Josey-Bass.
100.
McNamara, T.P.1991: Memory's view of space. In Bower, G.H., editor, The psychology of learning and motivation: advances in research and theory, Volume 27, New York: Academic Press, in press.
101.
Michelson, W.H.1985: From sun to sun. New Jersey: Rowan and Allanheld.
102.
Mills, C.W.1970: The sociological imagination. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
103.
Mitchell, J.K.1984: Hazard perception studies: convergent concerns and divergent approaches during the past decade. In Saarinen, T.F., Seamon, D. and Sell, J.L., editors, Environmental perception and behaviour: an inventory and prospect.Chicago: The University of Chicago, Department of Geography, Research Paper No. 209, 33–59.
104.
Norwood, V. and Monk, J., editors, 1987: The desert is no lady. New Haven: Yale University Press.
105.
Onaka, J.L.1983: A multiple-attribute housing disequilibrium model of residential mobility. Environment and PlanningA 15, 751–66.
106.
Pacione, M.1990: Urban livability: a review. Urban Geography2, 1–30.
107.
Pas, E.1984: The effects of selected socio-demographic characteristics on daily travel activity behaviour. Environment and PlanningA 16, 571–81.
108.
Potter, R.B.1984: Consumer behaviour and spatial cognition in relation to the extraversion-introversion dimension of personality. Journal of Social Psychology123, 29–34.
109.
Pratt, G.1989a: Quantitative techniques and humanistic-historical materialist perspectives. In Kobayashi, A. and Mackenzie, S., editors, Remaking human geography, London: Unwin Hyman, 101–15.
110.
Pratt, G.1989b: Reproduction, class, and the spatial structure of the city. In Peet, R. and Thrift, N., editors, New Models in Geography. London: Unwin Hyman, 84–108.
111.
Preston, V.A.1986: A case study of context effects and residential area evaluation in Hamilton, Canada. Environment and PlanningA 18, 41–52.
112.
Preston, V.A. and Taylor, S.M.1981: Personal construct theory and residential choice. Annals of the Association of American Geographers21, 437–61.
113.
Preston, V., Taylor, S.M. and Hodge, D.C.1983: Adjustment to natural and technological hazards. Environment and Behaviour15, 143–64.
114.
Purcell, A.T.1986: Environmental perception and affect: a schema discrepancy model. Environment and Behaviour18, 3–30.
115.
Rodin, J.1986: Aging and health: effects of the sense of control. Science233, 1271–76.
116.
Rose, D.1989: A feminist perspective of employment restructuring and gentrification. In Wolch, J. and Dear, M., editors, The power of geography: how territory shapes social life, Boston: Unwin Hyman, 118–38.
117.
Rushton, G.1969: Analysis of spatial behaviour by revealed space preference. Annals of the Association of American Geographers59, 391–400.
118.
Rushton, G.1979: Commentary on behavioural and perception geography,. Annals of the Association of American Geographers69, 463–64.
119.
Rushton, G.1988: Location theory, location-allocation models, and service development planning in the third world. Economic Geography64, 97–120.
120.
Saarinen, T.1979: Commentary-critique of Bunting-Guelke paper,. Annals of the Association of American Geographers69, 464–68.
121.
Saarinen, T.F., Seamon, D. and Sell, J.L.1984: Environmental perception and behaviour: an inventory and prospect. Chicago: The University of Chicago, Department of Geography, Research Paper No. 209.
122.
Schiff, M.1977: Hazard adjustment, locus of control, and sensation seeking: some null findings. Environment and Behaviour9, 233–13.
123.
Schwandt, T.R.1990: Paths of inquiry in the social disciplines: scientific constructivism, and critical theory methodologies. In Guba, E.G., editor, The paradigm dialogue, Beverley Hills, CA: Sage Publications, Chapter 21.
124.
Seamon, D.1987: Phenomenology and environment-behaviour research. In Zube, E.H. and Moore, G.T., editors, Advances in environment, behaviour, and design, Volume 1, New York: Plenum Press, 3–27.
125.
Seligman, M.E.P.1975: Helplessness: on depression, development, and death.San Francisco, CA: Freeman.
126.
Sell, J.L., Zube, E.H. and Kennedy, C.L.1988: Perception of land use change in a desert city. Journal of Architecture and Planning Research3, 33–54.
127.
Shippee, G., Burroughs, J. and Wakefield, S.1980: Dissonance theory revisited: perception of environmental hazards in residential areas. Environment and Behaviour12, 33–52.
128.
Simpson-Housley, P. and Bradshaw, P.1978: Personality and the perception of earthquake hazards. Australian Geographical Studies16, 65–72.
129.
Sims, J.H. and Baumann, D.1972: The Tornado threat: coping styles of the North and South. Science176, 1386–91.
130.
Smith, R.1985: Activism and social status as determinants of neighbourhood identity. The Professional Geographer37, 421–32.
131.
Sonnenfeld, J.1974: Environmental perception, personality, and behaviour: the Texas system. Man-Environment Systems4, 119–25.
132.
Sonnenfeld, J.1976: Multidimensional measurement of environmental personality. In Golledge, R.G. and Rushton, G., editors, Spatial choice and spatial behaviour, Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 50–66.
133.
Sonnenfeld, J.1985: Tests of spatial skills: a validation problem. Man-Environment Systems15, 107–20.
134.
Sonnenfeld, J.1988: Abilities, skills competence. In Hugill, P.J. and Dickson, D.B., editors, The transfer and transfermotion of ideas and material culture. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press.
135.
Spencer, C. and Blades, M.1986: Pattern and process: a review essay on the relationship between behavioural geography and environmental psychology. Progress in Human Geography10, 230–48.
136.
Taylor, S.M.1979: Personality predispositions and human spatial behaviour. Economic Geography55, 184–95.
137.
Taylor, S.M. and Konrad, V.1980: Scaling dispositions towards the past. Environment and Behaviour12, 283–307.
138.
Timmermans, H.1984: Discrete choice vs. decompositional multiattribute preference models: a comparative analysis of model performance in the context of spatial shopping behaviour. In Pitfield, D., editor, Discrete spatial choice models, London: Pion, 80–102.
139.
Timmermans, H.1988: Multipurpose trips and individual choice behaviour: an analysis using experimental design data. In Golledge, R.G. and Timmermans, H., editors, Behavioural modelling in geography and planning, London: Croom Helm, 356–67.
140.
Timmermans, H. and Golledge, R.G.1990: Applications of behavioural research on spatial problems II: preference and choice. Progress in Human Geography14, 311–54.
141.
Timmermans, H., Van der Heijde, R. and Westerweld, P.1982: Cognition of urban retailing structures. Tijdsckrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie73, 2–12.
142.
Timmermans, H., Van der Heijde, R. and Westerweld, P.1984: Decision-making between multiattribute choice alternatives: a model of spatial shopping behaviour using conjoint meàsurements. Environment and PlanningA 16, 377–87.
143.
Thompson, E.P.1978: The poverty of theory and other essays. London: Merlin Press.
144.
Verderber, S. 1987: Personal construct theory and the meaning of the single-family home. In Harvey, J. and Hennig, D., editors, Public environments, Proceedings of the 18th annual conference of the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), 194–202.
145.
Walmsley, D.J.1988: Urban living: the individual in the city. John Wiley and Sons.
146.
Walmsley, D.J. and Lewis, G.J.1984: Human geography: behavioural approaches. John Wiley and Sons.
147.
Ward, L.M. and Russell, J.A.1981: Cognitive sets and the perception of place. Environment and Behaviour43, 610–32.
148.
Wolfe, J.M.1989: Theory, hypothesis, explanation and action: the example of urban planning. In Kobyashi, A. and MacKenzie, S., editors, Remaking human geography, Boston: Unwin Hyman, 227–44.
149.
Zeigler, D.J. and Johnson, J.H.1984: Evacuation behaviour in response to nuclear power plant accidents. The Professional Geographer36, 207–15.