Konstfacks bibliotek

   
How images think
Komihåglistan är tom
Vis
Hylla
  • KONST - Iaa
Personnamn
Titel och upphov
  • How images think
Utgivning, distribution etc.
  • MIT Press, Cambridge, MA : cop. 2004
Utgivningsår
  • 2004
  • Språk: Engelska.
DDC klassifikationskod (Dewey Decimal Classification)
SAB klassifikationskod
Fysisk beskrivning
  • 253 s. ill.
Term
ISBN
  • 0262025493
  • 0262524414
Antal i kö:
  • 0 (0)
*000     cam a       7a 4500
*00148189
*00520180521164437.0
*008030625s2004    xxua||||||||||001 0|eng|c
*020  $a0262025493
*020  $a0262524414
*035  $a(DLC)  2003052710
*035  $a(SE-LIBR)8958193
*041  $aeng
*05000$aBF241$b.B79 2004
*08204$a153.32$222/swe
*084  $aPue$2kssb/7
*084  $aDodb$2kssb/7
*084  $aDoeba$2kssb/7
*084  $aBra$2kssb/7
*084  $aPu:do$2kssb/7
*1001 $aBurnett, Ron,$d1947-$4aut
*24510$aHow images think /$cRon Burnett.
*264 1$aCambridge, MA :$bMIT Press,$ccop. 2004
*300  $a253 s.$bill.
*650 7$aDigital bildbehandling$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Digital%20bildbehandling$2sao
*650 7$aSynen$2sao
*650 7$aBilder$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Bilder$2sao
*650 7$aMänniska-dator-interaktion$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/M%C3%A4nniska-dator-interaktion$2sao
*650 7$aDigitala medier$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Digitala%20medier$2sao
*650 7$aBildanalys (konst)$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Bildanalys%20%28konst%29$2sao
*650 7$aVisuell kommunikation$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Visuell%20kommunikation$2sao
*650 7$aVisuell perception$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Visuell%20perception$2sao
*650 7$aTänkande$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/T%C3%A4nkande$2sao
*650 7$aDigitala tekniker$2sao
*650 7$aPsykologi$0https://id.kb.se/term/sao/Psykologi$2sao
*650 0$aVisual perception.
*650 0$aImagery (Psychology)
*650 0$aThought and thinking.
*650 0$aThought and thinking
*650 0$aPictures
*650 0$aVisual perception
*650 0$aHuman-computer interaction
*650 0$aVisual communication
*650 0$aPsychology
*650 0$aDigital media
*852  $5Ko$bKo$cKONST -$hIaa
*887  $a{"@id":"3ldb46zf0hlvw26","modified":"2018-05-21T16:44:37+02:00","checksum":"158099134469"}$2librisxl
*887  $5Ko$a{"@id":"gs51r75bdlrjg0lb","modified":"2020-06-11T14:25:06.56+02:00","checksum":"155528674773"}$2librisxl
^
Det finns inga omdömen till denna titeln.
Klicka här för att vara den första som skriver ett omdöme.

Digital images are an integral part of all media, including television, film, photography, animation, video games, data visualization, and the Internet. In the digital world, spectators become navigators wending their way through a variety of interactive experiences, and images become spaces of visualization with more and more intelligence programmed into the very fabric of communication processes. In How Images Think, Ron Burnett explores this new ecology, which has transformed the relationships humans have with the image-based technologies they have created. So much intelligence has been programmed into these image-dependent technologies that it often seems as if images are "thinking"; ascribing thought to machines redefines our relationship with them and enlarges our ideas about body and mind. Burnett argues that the development of this new, closely interdependent relationship marks a turning point in our understanding of the connections between humans and machines. After presenting an overview of visual perception, Burnett examines the interactive modes of new technologies -- including computer games, virtual reality, digital photography, and film -- and locates digital images in a historical context. He argues that virtual images occupy a "middle space," combining the virtual and the real into an environment of visualization that blurs the distinctions between subject and object -- part of a continuum of experiences generated by creative choices by viewers, the results of which cannot be attributed either to images or to participants.

  • p. viii
  • p. x
  • p. xiv
  • p. 1
  • p. 39
  • p. 57
  • p. 71
  • p. 93
  • p. 117
  • p. 143
  • p. 167
  • p. 199
  • p. 222
  • p. 241
Sänd till
Ex.namnStatusFörfallodagTillhörPlatsHylla
Ex1Tillgängligt Konstfacks bibliotek KONST / ART - Iaa