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An interdisciplinary vue d'ensemble

An interdisciplinary vue d'ensemble

Guest lecture given at the University of Oregon, USA. Oct. 15, 2015. Part of week 3, lecture series: understanding contemporary media.

Georges Hattab

October 15, 2015
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  1. Guest Lecturer: Georges Hattab Faculty of Technology, Int. Research Training

    Group 1906, DiDy and Biodata Mining Group
 University of Bielefeld, Germany Week 3: Integration
 An interdisciplinary vue d’ensemble 1
  2. “ Informatics methods for the acquisition, analysis, mining and visualisation

    of images produced by modern microscopy, with an emphasis on the application of novel computing techniques to solve challenging and significant biological and medical problems at the molecular, sub-cellular, cellular, and super-cellular (organ, organism, and population) levels. ” 
 
 
 Peng H, Bateman A, Valencia A, Wren JD. Bioimage informatics: a new category in Bioinformatics. Bioinformatics. 2012;28(8):1057. doi:10.1093/ bioinformatics/bts111. SHORT PRESENTATION Courtesy of JP. Schlueter Research - Bioinformatics 2
  3. SCIENCE OR ART ? Small World Contest Nikon Microscopy 2014

    3 3rd Prize - Mr. Noah Fram-Schwartz, Greenwich, Conneticut, USA Specimen: Jumping spider eyes (20x) Technique: Reflected Light 1st Prize - Mr. Rogelio Moreno, Panama, Panama Specimen: Rotifer showing the mouth interior and heart shaped corona (40x) Technique: Differential Interference Contrast 2nd Prize - Mr. Alessandro Da Mommio, Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy Specimen: Rhombohedral cleavage in calcite crystal (10x) Technique: Polarised Light
  4. 6

  5. 1. PERCEPTION 9 1 the ability to see, hear, or

    become aware of something through the senses.
  6. WHAT IS AN IMAGE ? Digital Image Processing. Springer. 2002

    11 Each point is called a pixel or pel (picture element)
  7. The Kaiapó natives live along the Xingu River, in Mato

    Grosso. Their vast territory is formed mostly by tropical forests.Their body painting is very symbolic and signifies status and social behavior. The design is geometric with intricate lines, mainly in red and black. HOW PERCEIVING AFFECTS US ? “When we look at a rock what we are seeing is not the rock, but the effect of the rock upon us.” 
 Bertrand Russell Courtesy of outsidemom.com Courtesy of climbingreport.com 12
  8. CLOSURE The observer tends to mentally close the gaps to

    form a perception of a whole object Cig Harvey 16
  9. PERIODICITY Emphasis on the nature of things 19 Reuters/Damir Sagolj

    Dadaab: World's Biggest Refugee Camp Turns 20. Courtesy of UNHCR
  10. 2.1. COGNITION 20 1 the mental action or process of

    acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought, experience, and the senses.
  11. 21 CARL GUSTAV JUNG Psychiatrist - Psychotherapist “ The conscious

    mind allows itself to be trained like a parrot, but the unconscious does not-which is why St. Augustine thanked God for not making him responsible for his dreams. ” 
 Psychology and Alchemy (1944). CW 12: P.51 “ The world comes into being when man discovers it.” Symbols of Transformation. (1952). CW 5: P.652
  12. THE SCIENCE Brain Activity - Neuroplasticity A person's head is

    linked to a computer monitor with an EEG headset (pictured) and the electronic impulses of the brain measured while a song is being played 22
  13. 3. INFORMATION 23 P.187 illustration in Old Deccan Days 1

    facts provided or learned about something or someone.
  14. “ Claude Shannon, father of information theory, separated information from

    meaning. It is our task as humans to bring meaning back into this wasteland. As finite creatures who think and feel, we can create islands of meaning in the sea of information. ” 
 Freeman Dyson, in his review of James Gleick’s book on information, in NYRB. CLAUDE ELWOOD SHANNON Mathematician - Electronic Engineer - Cryptographer “I just wondered how things were put together.” The experimental mouse maze constructed of relays demonstrated machine learning. 1952 24
  15. 4. CREATIVITY - EXPRESSION 25 1 the use of imagination

    or original ideas to create something; inventiveness. 2 the action of making known one's thoughts or feelings.
  16. “All things are subject to interpretation. Whichever interpretation prevails at

    a given time is a function of power and not truth.”
 Friedrich Nietzsche Books smolder in a huge bonfire in Germany (1933). Catholic school students burn thousands of comic books in Binghamton, New York (1948). 4.1. INTERPRETATION 26
  17. “The limits of my language means the limits of my

    world.” 
 Ludwig Wittgenstein 4.2. LANGUAGE “If you have the words, there's always a chance that you'll find the way.”
 Seamus Heaney 27
  18. 5. EXPRESSION AND THE PHYSICAL BODY “Music is an outburst

    of the soul.” 
 Frederick Delius “People say graffiti is ugly, irresponsible and childish... but that's only if it's done properly.” Banksy Aryz street graffiti artist CC Wikimedia 28
  19. THE MONOTONE SYMPHONY March 1960, at the Galerie Internationale d'Art

    Contemporain in Paris, Yves Klein conducted a ten piece orchestra written in 1949. 29
  20. "I pray with all of my love for tulips" installation

    by Yayoi Kusama at the National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2012 “Polka dots can't stay alone. When we obliterate nature and our bodies with polka dots we become part of the unity of our environments.” Yayoi Kusama Self-Obliteration By Dots. 1968.
 © Hal Reiff 30
  21. 31

  22. To be an individual means the relationship, you have with

    your surroundings. You are not consciously allowing your surroundings to swallow you up. LIU BOLIN - THE INVISIBLE MAN 32