Big Data-A New Medium? (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Lushetich, Natasha
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Big Data-A New Medium? (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Lushetich, Natasha
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Drawing on a range of methods from across science and technology studies, digital humanities and digital arts, this book presents a comprehensive view of the Big Data phenomenon.
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Drawing on a range of methods from across science and technology studies, digital humanities and digital arts, this book presents a comprehensive view of the Big Data phenomenon.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 244
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000214604
- Artikelnr.: 60307818
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 244
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. November 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000214604
- Artikelnr.: 60307818
Natasha Lushetich is Professor of Contemporary Art & Theory at the University of Dundee. Her research is interdisciplinary and focuses on intermedia, biopolitics and performativity, the status of sensory experience in cultural knowledge, hegemony, and complexity.
Prologue: Why Ask the Question? Natasha Lushetich Section I: Patterning
Knowledge and Time 1. Big Data and/versus People Knowledge: On the
Ambiguities of Humanistic Research Ingrid Hoofd 2. Simulated Replicants
Forever? Big Data, Engendered Determinism and the end of Prophecy Franco
'Bifo' Berardi 3. "Visual Hallucination of Probable Events": On
Environments of Images, Data, and Machine Learning Abelardo Gil-Fournier
and Jussi Parikka Section II: Patterning Use and Extraction 4. Biometric
Datafication in Governmental and Personal Spheres Btihaj Ajana 5. Digital
Biopolitics and the Problem of Fatigue in Platform Capitalism Tim
Christaens 6. Appreciating Machine-Generated Artwork through Deep Learning
Mechanisms Lonce Wyse Section III: Patterning Cultural Heritage and Memory
7. Data to the Nth Degree: Zooming in On The Smart Set Craig J. Saper 8.
Intellectual Autonomy After Artificial Intelligence: The Future of Memory
Institutions and Historical Research Nicola Horsley 9. BeHere: Prosthetic
Memory in the Age of Digital Frottage Natasha Lushetich and Masaki Fujihata
Section IV: Patterning People 10. Surfaces and Depths: An Aesthetics of Big
Data Dominic Smith 11. POV Data Doubles, the Dividual and the Drive to
Visibility Mitra Azar 12. Reading Big Data as the Heterogenous Subject
Simon Biggs 13. Epilogue: Telepathic Exaptation in Late Cognitive
Capitalism: A Speculative Approach to the effects of Digitality Warren
Neidich
Knowledge and Time 1. Big Data and/versus People Knowledge: On the
Ambiguities of Humanistic Research Ingrid Hoofd 2. Simulated Replicants
Forever? Big Data, Engendered Determinism and the end of Prophecy Franco
'Bifo' Berardi 3. "Visual Hallucination of Probable Events": On
Environments of Images, Data, and Machine Learning Abelardo Gil-Fournier
and Jussi Parikka Section II: Patterning Use and Extraction 4. Biometric
Datafication in Governmental and Personal Spheres Btihaj Ajana 5. Digital
Biopolitics and the Problem of Fatigue in Platform Capitalism Tim
Christaens 6. Appreciating Machine-Generated Artwork through Deep Learning
Mechanisms Lonce Wyse Section III: Patterning Cultural Heritage and Memory
7. Data to the Nth Degree: Zooming in On The Smart Set Craig J. Saper 8.
Intellectual Autonomy After Artificial Intelligence: The Future of Memory
Institutions and Historical Research Nicola Horsley 9. BeHere: Prosthetic
Memory in the Age of Digital Frottage Natasha Lushetich and Masaki Fujihata
Section IV: Patterning People 10. Surfaces and Depths: An Aesthetics of Big
Data Dominic Smith 11. POV Data Doubles, the Dividual and the Drive to
Visibility Mitra Azar 12. Reading Big Data as the Heterogenous Subject
Simon Biggs 13. Epilogue: Telepathic Exaptation in Late Cognitive
Capitalism: A Speculative Approach to the effects of Digitality Warren
Neidich
Prologue: Why Ask the Question? Natasha Lushetich Section I: Patterning
Knowledge and Time 1. Big Data and/versus People Knowledge: On the
Ambiguities of Humanistic Research Ingrid Hoofd 2. Simulated Replicants
Forever? Big Data, Engendered Determinism and the end of Prophecy Franco
'Bifo' Berardi 3. "Visual Hallucination of Probable Events": On
Environments of Images, Data, and Machine Learning Abelardo Gil-Fournier
and Jussi Parikka Section II: Patterning Use and Extraction 4. Biometric
Datafication in Governmental and Personal Spheres Btihaj Ajana 5. Digital
Biopolitics and the Problem of Fatigue in Platform Capitalism Tim
Christaens 6. Appreciating Machine-Generated Artwork through Deep Learning
Mechanisms Lonce Wyse Section III: Patterning Cultural Heritage and Memory
7. Data to the Nth Degree: Zooming in On The Smart Set Craig J. Saper 8.
Intellectual Autonomy After Artificial Intelligence: The Future of Memory
Institutions and Historical Research Nicola Horsley 9. BeHere: Prosthetic
Memory in the Age of Digital Frottage Natasha Lushetich and Masaki Fujihata
Section IV: Patterning People 10. Surfaces and Depths: An Aesthetics of Big
Data Dominic Smith 11. POV Data Doubles, the Dividual and the Drive to
Visibility Mitra Azar 12. Reading Big Data as the Heterogenous Subject
Simon Biggs 13. Epilogue: Telepathic Exaptation in Late Cognitive
Capitalism: A Speculative Approach to the effects of Digitality Warren
Neidich
Knowledge and Time 1. Big Data and/versus People Knowledge: On the
Ambiguities of Humanistic Research Ingrid Hoofd 2. Simulated Replicants
Forever? Big Data, Engendered Determinism and the end of Prophecy Franco
'Bifo' Berardi 3. "Visual Hallucination of Probable Events": On
Environments of Images, Data, and Machine Learning Abelardo Gil-Fournier
and Jussi Parikka Section II: Patterning Use and Extraction 4. Biometric
Datafication in Governmental and Personal Spheres Btihaj Ajana 5. Digital
Biopolitics and the Problem of Fatigue in Platform Capitalism Tim
Christaens 6. Appreciating Machine-Generated Artwork through Deep Learning
Mechanisms Lonce Wyse Section III: Patterning Cultural Heritage and Memory
7. Data to the Nth Degree: Zooming in On The Smart Set Craig J. Saper 8.
Intellectual Autonomy After Artificial Intelligence: The Future of Memory
Institutions and Historical Research Nicola Horsley 9. BeHere: Prosthetic
Memory in the Age of Digital Frottage Natasha Lushetich and Masaki Fujihata
Section IV: Patterning People 10. Surfaces and Depths: An Aesthetics of Big
Data Dominic Smith 11. POV Data Doubles, the Dividual and the Drive to
Visibility Mitra Azar 12. Reading Big Data as the Heterogenous Subject
Simon Biggs 13. Epilogue: Telepathic Exaptation in Late Cognitive
Capitalism: A Speculative Approach to the effects of Digitality Warren
Neidich