This is a prompt for a study, focusing on the walker’s attention as the medium of the walk.
Choose a type of attention to work with. This might be sensory. A tactile-focused attention might be directed to lay hands on things in the environment, to lean or sit on them. A vision focused attention might play with proximity and distance, zoom in and zoom out, or the identification of certain visual patterns or colors.
You might define attention in non-sensory terms. For example bringing a geometric attention to a landscape, while obviously visual, also overlays a hypothetical math picture on the environment. A cartographic attention might highlight junctures and landmarks. A materials attention might differentiate between asphalt and paint and metal and dirt.
Since this is a study, choose something specified, narrow the category.
Write a 5-minute script to guide the walker’s attention. You might write for audio (assuming the default of a walker wearing headphones listening to a recorded track). You might write a non-audio guide (assume the default of a printed piece of paper that contains the guide). To ground the exercise, write this script for a particular site.
If you want more, choose another form of attention, one that feels categorically distant from the form you just used.
If you want more, play with rewriting one of your scripts for an unspecified site, attempting to change the script as little as possible. What has to change to make the script work across different locations that aren’t known or controlled?
Record it (simplest to use a Voice Memo or Voice Recorder app, or Quicktime’s “new audio recording” option if you have an Apple) and try it out.