"Delivering on the importance and likely future prevalence of physical representations of data, Making Data is an innovative and engaging study. For many outside of the scientific community, big data and the forms it takes, such as statistical lists, spreadsheets and graphs, often seem abstract and unintelligible. This book explores the creative methods, processes, theories and cultural histories of making physical representations of information and proposes that the making of data into physical objects is the next important development in the data visualization phenomenon"--
"Delivering on the importance and likely future prevalence of physical representations of data, Making Data is an innovative and engaging study. For many outside of the scientific community, big data and the forms it takes, such as statistical lists, spreadsheets and graphs, often seem abstract and unintelligible. This book explores the creative methods, processes, theories and cultural histories of making physical representations of information and proposes that the making of data into physical objects is the next important development in the data visualization phenomenon"--Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ian Gwilt is Professor of Design at the University of South Australia.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Karel van der Waarde (Graphic Design Consultant Belgium) Introduction Ian Gwilt (University of South Australia) Part One: Theories 1. Data Objects Thinking With Your Hands Adrien Segal (California College of the Arts USA) 2. Shifting Data between the Material and the Virtual is Not an Immaterial Matter Dew Harrison (University of Wolverhampton UK) 3. Data as Environment: Physicalization Strategies for Communicating Environmental Data Dietmar Offenhuber (Northeastern University USA) and Laura Perovich (MIT USA) 4. Designing Explanations of Data-based Interactions in Socio-Technical Systems Aaron Fry (Parsons School of Design USA) 5. Moving Data: Visualizing Human and Nonhuman Movement Artistically Michele Barker and Anna Munster (University of New South Wales Australia) Part Two: Practices 6. Uncanny Landscapes: Experiential Encounters with Ecological Data Zoë Sadokierski Monica Monin and Andrew Burrell (University of Technology Sydney Australia) 7. Exploring Digital-material Hybridity in the Postdigital Museum Daniela Petrelli and Nick Dulake (Sheffield Hallam University UK) 8. Socio-material Translations of Data and Value(s) Bettina Nissen (University of Edinburgh UK) 9. Personal Data Manifestation: A Tangible Poetics of Data Giles Lane (Proboscis UK) and George Roussos (Birkbeck University of London UK) 10. Data and Emotion: The Climate Change Object Karin von Ompteda (OCAD Canada) Part Three: Techniques 11. Hybrid Data Constructs: Interacting with Biomedical Data in Augmented Spaces Daniel F. Keefe Bridger Herman Jung Who Nam Daniel Orban and Seth Johnson (University of Minnesota USA) 12. Sonic Data Physicalization Stephen Barrass (University of Canberra Australia) 13. Making with Climate Data: Materiality Metaphor and Engagement Mitchell Whitelaw and Geoff Hinchcliffe (Australian National University) 14. Waterfalls as a Form of AI-based Feedback for Creativity Support Georgi V. Georgiev and Yazan Barhoush (University of Oulu Finland) 15. Data as Action: Constructing Dynamic Data Physicalizations Jason Alexander (University of Bath UK) Part Four: Trajectories 16. Making Data: The Next Generation Ian Gwilt and Aaron Davis (University of South Australia)
Foreword Karel van der Waarde (Graphic Design Consultant Belgium) Introduction Ian Gwilt (University of South Australia) Part One: Theories 1. Data Objects Thinking With Your Hands Adrien Segal (California College of the Arts USA) 2. Shifting Data between the Material and the Virtual is Not an Immaterial Matter Dew Harrison (University of Wolverhampton UK) 3. Data as Environment: Physicalization Strategies for Communicating Environmental Data Dietmar Offenhuber (Northeastern University USA) and Laura Perovich (MIT USA) 4. Designing Explanations of Data-based Interactions in Socio-Technical Systems Aaron Fry (Parsons School of Design USA) 5. Moving Data: Visualizing Human and Nonhuman Movement Artistically Michele Barker and Anna Munster (University of New South Wales Australia) Part Two: Practices 6. Uncanny Landscapes: Experiential Encounters with Ecological Data Zoë Sadokierski Monica Monin and Andrew Burrell (University of Technology Sydney Australia) 7. Exploring Digital-material Hybridity in the Postdigital Museum Daniela Petrelli and Nick Dulake (Sheffield Hallam University UK) 8. Socio-material Translations of Data and Value(s) Bettina Nissen (University of Edinburgh UK) 9. Personal Data Manifestation: A Tangible Poetics of Data Giles Lane (Proboscis UK) and George Roussos (Birkbeck University of London UK) 10. Data and Emotion: The Climate Change Object Karin von Ompteda (OCAD Canada) Part Three: Techniques 11. Hybrid Data Constructs: Interacting with Biomedical Data in Augmented Spaces Daniel F. Keefe Bridger Herman Jung Who Nam Daniel Orban and Seth Johnson (University of Minnesota USA) 12. Sonic Data Physicalization Stephen Barrass (University of Canberra Australia) 13. Making with Climate Data: Materiality Metaphor and Engagement Mitchell Whitelaw and Geoff Hinchcliffe (Australian National University) 14. Waterfalls as a Form of AI-based Feedback for Creativity Support Georgi V. Georgiev and Yazan Barhoush (University of Oulu Finland) 15. Data as Action: Constructing Dynamic Data Physicalizations Jason Alexander (University of Bath UK) Part Four: Trajectories 16. Making Data: The Next Generation Ian Gwilt and Aaron Davis (University of South Australia)
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