Etikettarkiv: English

Perception, Imagology and Visualization this year

Professor Anthony Johnson

Professor Anthony Johnson

After the student’s texts last week, I will now publish some posts in English, due to our current courses in English and all the positive interest that we receive from exchange students!

On this Thursday two of our courses in Visual Studies will start, and both are given in English. The first one is simply called Image Perception and Cognition, and it explains the basics in current neurological and psychological knowledge about the human visual system. You will learn some anatomy of the brain and the mechanisms at different stages in its processing of visual information. It will be a mind-boggling and exciting journey, all the way from the ”simple” registration of light at the retina, up to the cognitive job of consciously interpreting what we see!

The second course to start this Thursday is very different from the first one, so this way you really have a chance to get a clue of how broad and open the field of Visual studies really is! It is a course in arts and literature, given by our professor in English language and literature, Anthony Johnson, whom you see a picture of here. He is a legendary lecturer, and a jazz musician too.

The subject of his course is not so far away from psychological concerns as one might believe, because it is really about Imagology – a research field created by scholars who want to understand the mental images we form, for example when we read a certain text. In some respect, imagology was founded almost 100 years ago, when the American journalist and scholar Walter Lippmann developed his theory on the stereotypes we use when we describe members of certain nations or groups.

Anthony’s course is called Cultural Imagology – An introduction, and because it is about cultural imagology, he will not only talk about national and social stereotypes but also about the way people conceive of literature, geography and music. In the first lecture this Thursday, he will however begin with defining what an image is, or could be.

For those of you registered in the Image Perception and Cognition course, I will give an introduction on this Thursday, September 5th at 2 PM, in the Arken building of human sciences and languages here in Turku, room E201 (Camera Obscura). Then there is a one hour pause, and at 4 PM Anthony Johnson’s lecture starts in the same room. It will last for two hours.

Maybe you are a biologist or a student of computer systems who is also interested in art and literature, or maybe you are a student of literature who wants to know how the brain works? Then you are welcome to attend both courses!

Screen-Ddump from looking at tissue layers in BioImageXD.

Screen-dump from looking at tissue layers in BioImageXD.

In October and November I will myself give a course on Comics together with Folkloristics and Sociology. Further information in English is here. At the end of January a fourth Visual Studies course in English starts. Its name is Visuality and Visualization of Information.

This course will really give rich opportunities of combining arts with knowledge of the brain, because it is about why certain design strategies are better than others. We will use a textbook by the American psychologist Colin Ware, who is currently one of the internationally most acclaimed scientists in the expanding field Visualization.

This is a field in which neurological research, which may seem technical and abstract to many, is really put to practise in the form of effective strategies for visualization. It could be of use for marketers and web designers, but not the least for students and scholars who want to communicate research visually. There is a joint Master’s program in Bioimaging between Åbo Akademi University and Turku University, and many of our perception students have been from there. The Turku Bioimaging center (se link at top right here) has generously given all of us an opportunity to see how modern visualization works. They have created the free image processing tool BioImageXD that anyone can download at the BioImageXD page.

After downloading and opening the program, you can experiment yourself with multi-layer microscope images that you download as a free sample package at the SourceForge download page (see links at the bottom of the BioImage XD download page). The image that I show here is from a session that me and one of my students had with the program. We noticed that the possibility of generating views in 3D really added a lot to the precision of the visualization. In the Visuality and Visualization of information course we will study both simple and complex visualizations, ranging from comic books to medicine and physics, and at the end you will have the opportunity to realize a new visualization yourself.

For more inspiration, see:

”Genes to Cognition” page with an interactive 3D brain (very good for training at the Image Perception and Cognition course)

A short text defining Imagology

A Vimeo lecture on visualization by Colin Ware

/

länkning pågår till intressant.se

Start för Imagologi! / Imagology starts in Turku!

Anthony Johnson (bild ÅA)

Anthony Johnson (bild ÅA)

Med friska tag efter sommaren startar bloggen med en annonsering. Särskilt för dem som studerar på kandidat-, gradu- eller doktorandnivå här på Åbo Akademi. Vår professor i engelska språket och litteraturen, Anthony Johnson (bilden) ger under hösten en ny kurs om forskningsfältet Imagologi som han själv till stor del har varit med om att skapa. ”Ant” är en mycket inspirerande och underhållande föreläsare och det här är ett unikt tillfälle att bekanta sig med ett helt nytt sätt att förhålla sig till det visuella inom såväl bild som språk.

Kursen startar redan på torsdag nästa vecka (den 6e) och den som är behörig och intresserad av att delta ska anmäla sig i systemet Min Plan innan dess. För den som ännu är på kandidatnivå avläggs kursen som 3 poäng, graduskribenter och doktorander avlägger däremot 5 poäng med litet mer avancerade uppgifter. Här är mer information på engelska:

Hello,

I (Fred) take the liberty to advertise a new course in the Åbo Akademi ”Visual Studies”
programme – ”Cultural Imagology – An Introduction”. It will be held by Professor Anthony
Johnson and starts next Thursday (the 6th) at 4-6 PM in Helikon, Arken. The target group
is BA, MA and doctoral students. For BA students there is a 3 credits option, for MA and
doctoral students a 5 credits option. Registration should be done at MinPlan prior to
Thursday 6th.

Please see the attached program for details:

Cultural Imagology: An Introduction

Week

36                  06.09             1.                   Introduction: Cultural Imagology (Or: What is an

Image?) – An Overview

37                  13.09             2.                   [Reading Period (No Lecture)]

38                  20.09             3.                   National Imagology – The Social Level

39                  27.09             4.                   Historical Imagology – The Temporal Level

40                  04.10             5.                   Geographical Imagology – The Spatial Level

41                  11.10             6.                   Sensual Imagology: the Soundscape; Smellscape,

Taste

42                  17.10             7.                   [Reading Period (No Lecture)]

Students will have the opportunity to take the course either for 5 credits or for 3 credits (see below):

a. The 5 credit option

MA (advanced) level, please see prerequisites (below)

Lecture/Seminar Course

Offered: Autumn 2012

Place: Helikon (A202) [September 6th]

Camera Obscura (E201) September 20th to November 11th)

Lecturer: Anthony Johnson

Contact: engelska@abo.fi

Aim: Because the study of images (and an understanding of ways in which images are constructed) is an essential component in all Humanities Research, the field of Cultural Imagology has been developed as an interdisciplinary service discipline to help researchers deepen their understanding of the issues behind image studies within their own discipline and to develop a working knowledge of selected theoretical approaches that may be of use to them in the pursuit of their own special research interests

Contents: Topics covered will include: Cultural Imagology (Or: What is an Image?) – An Overview; National Imagology – The Social Level; Historical Imagology – The Temporal Level; Geographical Imagology – The Spatial Level; The Soundscape, Smellscape, Taste

Mode of study: Seminars

Prerequisites for MA-students of English: 60 credits (ECTS) of English at university level. For other students there are no prerequisites.

Target audience: Doctoral, Licentiate and Masters level students within the Faculty of Humanities.

Form of assessment: One fifteen-page essay (6000 words) handed in to Anthony Johnson (anthony.johnson@abo.fi) by 5th December 2012, as well as adequate preparation (readings and tasks) for and active participation in seminars

Course literature: Manfred Beller and Joep Leerssen (eds.), Imagology: The Cultural Construction and Literary Representation of National Characters A Critical Survey. Series: Studia Imagologica, vol. 13; series editors: Hugo Dyserinck and Joep Leerssen (Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, 2007). ISBN 978-90-420-2318-5 + selected literary texts and handouts.]

b. The 3 credit option

BA level, please see prerequisites (below)

Lecture/Seminar Course

Offered: Autumn 2012

Place: Helikon (A202) [September 6th]

Camera Obscura (E201) September 20th to November 11th)

Lecturer: Anthony Johnson

Contact: engelska@abo.fi

Aim: Because the study of images (and an understanding of ways in which images are constructed) is an essential component in all Humanities Research, the field of Cultural Imagology has been developed as an interdisciplinary service discipline to help researchers develop understanding of the issues behind image studies within their own discipline and to begin to cultivate a working knowledge of selected theoretical approaches that may be of use to them in the pursuit of their own special research interests

Contents: Topics covered will include: Cultural Imagology (Or: What is an Image?) – An Overview; National Imagology – The Social Level; Historical Imagology – The Temporal Level; Geographical Imagology – The Spatial Level; The Soundscape, Smellscape, Taste

Mode of study: Seminars

Prerequisites for BA-students of English: 25 credits (ECTS) of English at university level. For other students there are no prerequisites.

Target audience: Students of English language and literature (Exchange students also welcome).

Form of assessment: A course journal (minimum 3000 words) handed in to Anthony Johnson (anthony.johnson@abo.fi) by 5th December 2012, as well adequate preparation (readings and tasks) for and active participation in all sessions.

Course literature: Manfred Beller and Joep Leerssen (eds.), Imagology: The Cultural Construction and Literary Representation of National Characters A Critical Survey. Series: Studia Imagologica, vol. 13; series editors: Hugo Dyserinck and Joep Leerssen (Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, 2007). ISBN 978-90-420-2318-5 + selected literary texts and handouts.]

länkning pågår till intressant.se