Abstract

The global community decorates their homes based on personal decisions and contextual influences of their larger cultural and economic surroundings. The extent to which spatial patterns emerge in residential decoration practices has been traditionally difficult to ascertain due to the private nature of interior home spaces. Yet, measuring these patterns can reveal the presence of geographic culture hearths and/or globalization trends.In this work, we collected over one million geolocated images of interior living spaces from a popular home rental website, Airbnb (http://airbnb.com), and used transfer learning techniques to automatically detect the presence of key stylistic objects: plants, books, decor, wall art and predominance of vibrant colors. We investigated patterns of home decor practices for 107 cities on six continents, and performed a deep dive into six major U.S. cities.We found that world regions show statistically significant variation in decorative element prevalence, indicating differences in geographic cultural trends. At the U.S. neighborhood level, elements were only weakly spatially clustered and found to not correlate with socio-economic neighborhood variables such as income, unemployment rates, education attainment, residential property value, and racial diversity. These results may suggest that American residents in different socio-economic environments put similar effort into personalizing and caring for their homes. More broadly, our results represent a new view of worldwide human behavior and a new application of machine learning techniques to the exploration of cultural phenomena.

Highlights

  • Interior decoration and ornamentation is a key form of human self-expression and communication of values and ideals [1,2,3]

  • The Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) F-test statistic revealed that the presence or absence of each element, except for decor, was more similar within regions than across regions (Table 2) and Plants Books Wall Art Decor Color

  • 5 Discussion and conclusions 5.1 Discussion In our study of geolocated images of interior living spaces, we discovered that residents in world regions tend to decorate in statistically-different ways regarding wall art, color, plants, and books—but exhibit similarities in their use of general decor

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Summary

Introduction

Interior decoration and ornamentation is a key form of human self-expression and communication of values and ideals [1,2,3]. This is especially true in the home, where residents and owners have agency to personalize their surroundings and cultivate a space for themselves and visitors [4]. If similar elements are available around the world, there may be an increasing convergence between international cultural decorative behaviors that reveal an underlying similarity in decorative preferences regardless of locality

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