User:Karina/capturing memories in time: Difference between revisions
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<div style="text-align: right; direction: ltr; margin-left: 1em;">[https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Karina/graduation_project jump to graduation project]</div> | |||
<div style="text-align: right; direction: ltr; margin-left: 1em;">[https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/User:Karina/thesis_outline jump to thesis outline]</div> | |||
Capturing Memories In Time also used as Thesis Page | |||
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previous work that relates: | |||
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[https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Karina/the_psychology_of_time_synopsis Psychology of Time] | |||
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[https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Karina/time_perception_in_dance Time Perception in Dance] | |||
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===30 OCT=== | |||
Vox: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58nPEe-TU-w Why this awful sounding album is a masterpiece] | |||
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I love the explanations and supporting visuals to Vox's Earworm podcast by Estelle Caswell. I've added her videos numerous times on this wiki page. All 6 videos available [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJ8cMiYb3G5fyqfIwGjH2fYC5fFLfdwW4 here] | |||
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Here is another that I missed: | |||
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Vox: [https://www.vox.com/videos/2017/8/18/16162440/recording-studio-mishap-shaped-80s-music How a recording studio mishap shaped ’80s music] | |||
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how to transcribe this video? | |||
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try voice to text technique using [https://techwiser.com/transcribe-youtube-video/ Google Docs] | |||
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Feedback from Andre | |||
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dance as a system | |||
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constants, patterns | |||
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mathematical / scientific | |||
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formula behind pop songs / jazz songs | |||
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generative music, computer write sonata | |||
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David Burn (Bob Wilson - Dirty Dozen Brass Band) | |||
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Vox relation | |||
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notation is not the work, it's the blueprint / a score | |||
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Florian - context? | |||
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what separates dance and music with resource of score? | |||
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music has a way of transmitting score. score is accepted in music, but not in dance - why? | |||
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what is this important to you? | |||
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look at practitioners that look at memory | |||
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search on jstor key terms: dance & memory | |||
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Steve Paxton & Trisha Brown | |||
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'Material for the Spine' | |||
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main problem: not approaching the matter in a way I could deal with | |||
* SongSim looks only at one element (lyrics) | |||
* easy to encapsulate structure | |||
* macro view | |||
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'''can you quantify dance by anything?''' | |||
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write / express BPM differently - shorter distances between lines, show faster BPM | |||
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make own notations on Labanotation | |||
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Special Issue 02 performance was a two part outcome | |||
# a (graphical) documenting tool that I could personally use in the future | |||
# playful, slightly educational, interactive experience for the audience | |||
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this frame could be used for the graduation project too | |||
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generative systems | |||
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squared paper - each square a second | |||
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visualisation | |||
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"basing on this, this and that factor, found these variables, time is constant" | |||
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WSA - looked at language of time to measure / quantify it | |||
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Johanna Drucker - [http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674724938 Graphesis] | |||
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[https://events.newschool.edu/event/johanna_drucker_visualization_and_knowledge_modelling_discovery_display#.WfnC2kzMyqA pervious event] in NY (Sept 2017) | |||
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===29 OCT=== | |||
I want the audience to decode a transcribed dance language (notation) | |||
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Figure it out by doing? | |||
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Mix and matching layers | |||
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Measuring time, time perception | |||
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Measuring dance | |||
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Dance perception | |||
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Decoding the language of dance | |||
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Need to describe it to document it | |||
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Different ways to describe dance (onomatopoeias, rhythm, scatting, graphical notation, BPM) | |||
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What was Laban's aim, drive, purpose? | |||
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Impossible to fully archive experience? | |||
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I suggest tackling this by making a coding system to capture an intangible object / experience / dance | |||
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My frustration? Video is actually a shitty medium to capture dance (an experience). | |||
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Aim: propose a new system / method / medium. Hopefully can be used for more experiences than just dance | |||
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Language has a key (alphabet) and is spread through word of mouth, contact with people. | |||
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The medium to archive it / preserve it (apart from word of mouth) are audio (recordings, songs, radio), visual (books, posters) and audio-visual (plays, films, tv) | |||
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How did some languages survive when suppressed during history / wars? Why did some die out? How are they being decoded? | |||
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===26 OCT=== | |||
Look for podcasts [http://rwm.macba.cat/en/sonia here] | |||
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"SON[I]A aims to be an alternative way to receive the information produced during Museum activities; audio information brought to us by characters who take part in activities in and around the MACBA." | |||
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Feedback from Marloes and Steve | |||
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* 1-2 lines for research question | |||
* if describe practise, what is it about? | |||
* think about reader | |||
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===25 OCT=== | |||
why I am so keen on documenting / capturing dance? | |||
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previously thought about project to capture the relationship between Sean and I (the urgency was in capturing us before it was too late, before we split ways and before my memory fades) - sadly our splitting came faster than expected | |||
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yet I am still focused on notation, memory, the brain, archiving, capturing an experience | |||
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what makes it so urgent, so personal? | |||
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could it be anything, subconsciously, related to my MS? I do have a fear of losing my ability to dance, of losing my memory (again), of forgetting the memories I am forming now with my new ‘dance family’ | |||
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I don’t want yet another project related to my health (Mind as a Dossier and Epilepic) in my portfolio. I don’t want to be that designer / creative that always falls back on this topic, possibly showing myself as a victim to pity over. The previous 2 were uplifting, educational, eye-opening, helpful.. but do I really want that to be my thing? | |||
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small project idea: | |||
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play around with light sensitive material that makes text vanish with time | |||
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text can be read for a few seconds after contact with light, then disappears | |||
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in order to keep the content of the book documented, photos on the phone should be taken? - will that work? isn’t that more light? | |||
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comparison to memory. the book is the knowledge that you have a memory, the content is the memory itself | |||
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e.g. “I remember eating dinner last night, but I can’t remember what it was” | |||
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Look back at previous texts, [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Karina/the_psychology_of_time_synopsis The Psychology Of Time Synopsis] and [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Karina/time_perspectives_and_cultural_diversity_essay Time Perspectives and Cultural Diversity], which look into Philip Zimbardo's time perception. I’d consider myself future TP, always planning ahead, excited about future, sometimes worried | |||
* Past TP - focused on positives | |||
* Past TP - focused on negative | |||
* Present TP - hedonism (focus on joys of life) | |||
* Present TP - fatalism (doesn't matter, life is controlled) | |||
* Future TP - life goal oriented | |||
* Future TP - transcendental (life begins after death or the mortal body) | |||
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Anna's feedback (summary from recorded conversation) | |||
* don’t worry about it | |||
* nothing to worry about, reasoning behind the start of the project (why I am doing it?) is not evident in work that is presented | |||
* great to have personal starting point, personal things make great things | |||
* everything you're going to do is going to be some representation of yourself, one way or another | |||
* base of project can be health, go off of it, represent it so it's not read as "poor me, I'm sick" | |||
* talk about archiving dance in a more generalised sense, say what you find interesting | |||
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The full conversation will be transcribed from audio soon. Here is a snippet that followed: | |||
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: A: have you tried to discover what would be the best way to gather this experience into one medium, or do you have to have multiple mediums? | |||
: K: that's when I started looking into realities, and mixable realities, because if you just focus on one, the more you put data, the more you can express an experience.. although, as a viewer you will never have my experience, you will have your experience. Maybe if you've been to Crete before, then you could re-see what I saw. So you will never manage to get to a point where we can fully have the same experience. | |||
: A: Because that's also based on previous experiences | |||
: K: So it becomes a bias for sure | |||
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===23 OCT=== | |||
Feedback from Aymeric | |||
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pick one topic | |||
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one is not going to be better than the other | |||
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what do you really want to dive into? | |||
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make it concrete | |||
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# '''notation''' - non-universal / language specific | |||
# '''mixable realities''' - experiencing the intangible | |||
# '''subculture''' - transmission of knowledge | |||
# '''archive''' - usefulness, temporary, making things public | |||
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how would you share / present this? | |||
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why interesting? in any other field? | |||
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# '''documentation''' - graphical / video / notebook | |||
# '''special awareness''' - bird's eye view | |||
# '''time / speed / rhythm''' - structured 8-count / free-flow scatting | |||
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sharing in community | |||
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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literate_programming Literate programming] by Donald Knuth | |||
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interest into education: what's the best way to communicate? | |||
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perception | |||
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normalise / universal method is questionable | |||
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again universal method | |||
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subtle / diverse, people are perceiving knowledge differently | |||
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thesis structure doesn't need to be scientific | |||
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experiments / content / tools / methods as text, not appendices | |||
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thesis is distant reflexion | |||
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diversity in methods | |||
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# topic | |||
# applied to dance | |||
# what's the urgency to look into this topic? - reflect | |||
* cultural diversity (preserve, not normalise world) | |||
* pragmatic (interesting because truth in diversity in education. look into history of educational methods) | |||
# find manner to show collected material | |||
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===22 OCT=== | |||
Facebook: [https://www.facebook.com/jasonlsilva/videos/1808383712759239/ Living In The Moment] by Jason Silva | |||
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===11 OCT=== | |||
Experiment idea: | |||
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learn new Lindy steps with a friend using [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF2lt7HH4EMB8Whdk6l9tXUdsKsYGZa3D YouTube videos] created by own dance school | |||
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===10 OCT=== | |||
YouTube: [https://youtu.be/YdzZn_giE4w Brain Coupling] by Jason Silva | |||
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===9 OCT=== | |||
Feedback from Andre | |||
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* start small approaches / tests / prototypes / experiments | |||
* explore small themes continuously | |||
* have 3-4 weeks to experiment | |||
* then have 3-4 weeks to reflect on annotation from afar, to narrow down question | |||
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* what project could you do in 1 week? | |||
* own note: don't want experiments just conducted by me, it'll be subjective / I know what outcome I want | |||
* how do you represent your outcome? vector image / gif / sound file / sound image | |||
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use 3D glasses analogy - experience vs. data | |||
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difference in perception | |||
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Monoskop: [https://monoskop.org/log/?s=salome+voegelin Listening to Noise and Silence: Towards a Philosophy of Sound Art] by Salomé Voegelin | |||
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sound is fleeting, not attainable | |||
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even static image is fleeting / an illusion | |||
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[http://www.verandaproduction.net/pages/cartographics.html Cartographics: a site-specific audio-choreography] by Petra Sabisch | |||
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strong effects with simple means: headphones; rooftop; mirror(?) | |||
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YouTube: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOkQE7m31Pw Alter Bahnhof Video Walk] | |||
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wikipedia: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway's_Game_of_Life Conway's Game of Life] | |||
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flow-chart-like | |||
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make choreographic description, then perform it | |||
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to do: | |||
* make one experiment during holiday | |||
* document it in blog / video / graphic notation | |||
* add woman from movement workshop last year onto 'who could help you' list | |||
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===25 SEPT=== | |||
Psychology of dance | |||
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Dancehub: [https://blog.dancehub.com/psychological-studies-dancing/ 5 Interesting Psychological Studies Involving Dancing] | |||
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(not great source, but has many links to studies related to topic) | |||
# [https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-athletes-way/201310/why-is-dancing-so-good-your-brain Dancing Improves Your Brain] | |||
# [https://news.ucsc.edu/2013/07/warburton-dance-study.html Mental Practice Can Lead To Improved Dancing] | |||
# [http://www.apa.org/monitor/2010/04/dance.aspx The Evolution Of Human Dance May Have Been A Mistake] | |||
# [http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/2013/10/research-investigates-science-behind-dance Dancers Can Learn Routines In Different Ways] | |||
# [https://www.theguardian.com/education/2009/dec/15/research-why-people-dance Girls Under Age 16 Have The Most Dancing Confidence] | |||
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1. Dancing Improves Your Brain | |||
Psychology Today: [https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-athletes-way/201310/why-is-dancing-so-good-your-brain Why Is Dancing So Good for Your Brain?] | |||
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more references / cited studies about how dancing can improve the brain | |||
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2. Mental Practice Can Lead To Improved Dancing | |||
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University of California Santa Clara Cruz: [https://news.ucsc.edu/2013/07/warburton-dance-study.html UCSC dance research published in prestigious Psychology Science journal] | |||
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3. The Evolution Of Human Dance May Have Been A Mistake | |||
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American Psychological Association: [http://www.apa.org/monitor/2010/04/dance.aspx Dance, dance evolution] | |||
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not many animals have close connections between auditory and motor skills | |||
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"Psychologists’ research on the power of movement is giving us insight into why we first danced and how cultures built on that ancient impulse." | |||
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4. Dancers Can Learn Routines In Different Ways | |||
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Duke Chronicle: [http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/2013/10/research-investigates-science-behind-dance Research investigates the science behind dance] | |||
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5. Girls Under Age 16 Have The Most Dancing Confidence (not related?) | |||
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The Guardian: [https://www.theguardian.com/education/2009/dec/15/research-why-people-dance Why do people dance?] | |||
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Springer: [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10339-005-0014-x Thinking in action: thought made visible in contemporary dance] by Catherine Stevens and Shirley McKechnie | |||
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Buy entire journal for EUR 42.29 | |||
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or find through [http://hr.nl/mediatheek HR mediatheek] | |||
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[https://hogeschoolrotterdam.on.worldcat.org/search?databaseList=&queryString=Thinking+in+action%3A+thought+made+visible+in+contemporary+dance download links here] | |||
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[http://web.a.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=1&sid=9502d4c8-0168-431f-9f62-53c234ef60b8%40sessionmgr4006 link to downloaded file] | |||
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Abstract | |||
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Contemporary dance—movement deliberately and systematically cultivated for its own sake—is examined in the light of the '''procedural and declarative view of long-term knowledge'''. We begin with a description of two settings in which new works of contemporary dance are created and performed. Although '''non-verbal''', contemporary dance can be a '''language''' declared through movement and stillness of the body. Ideas for new movement material come from objects, events or imaginings that are spoken, seen, heard, imagined, or felt. Declared through movement, the idea becomes visible. '''Communication in dance''' involves general psychological processes such as direct visual perception of '''motion and force, motor simulation via mirror neurons, and implicit learning of movement vocabularies and grammars'''. Creating and performing dance appear to involve both procedural and declarative knowledge. The latter includes the role of '''episodic memory''' in performance and occasional labelling of movement phrases and sections in rehearsal. '''Procedural knowledge in dance is augmented by expressive nuance, feeling and communicative intent''' that is not characteristic of other movement-based procedural tasks. Having delineated lexical and grammatical components in dance, neural mechanisms are identified based on Ullman’s (Ullman in Cognition 92:231–270, 2004) '''alignment of lexical knowledge with declarative memory and mental grammar with procedural memory'''. We conclude with suggestions for experiments to test these assumptions that concern thought in action in composition, performance and appreciation of contemporary dance. | |||
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check out their 60+ references | |||
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reference if want to add to own bibliography | |||
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Stevens, Catherine; McKechnie, Shirley (2005). "Thinking in action: Thought made visible in contemporary dance". Cognitive Processing. 6 (4): 243–252. doi:10.1007/s10339-005-0014-x. | |||
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Jstor: [http://www.jstor.org/stable/25209041?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents A Nonverbal Language for Imagining and Learning: Dance Education in K-12 Curriculum] by Judith Lynne Hanna | |||
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===20 SEPT=== | |||
ABC Radio: [http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/allinthemind/songlines-indigenous-memory-code/7581788 Songlines: the Indigenous memory code] | |||
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Japing Aboriginal Art: [https://japingkaaboriginalart.com/articles/songlines-important-aboriginal-art/ Why Songlines Are Important In Aboriginal Art] | |||
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Amazon: [https://www.amazon.com/Computer-Power-Human-Reason-Calculation/dp/0716704633 Computer Power and Human Reason: From Judgment to Calculation] by Joseph Weizenbaum (1976) | |||
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===13 SEPT=== | |||
look into: scatting as a measurement of time in dance | |||
* it gives more possibilities (to distinguish the 4-'a'-5 counts) | |||
* look into history, how / why / when it originated - Harlem late 1920s? | |||
* learn to scat? what is important that may not seem obvious? | |||
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===13 SEPT=== | |||
Human Memory: [http://www.human-memory.net/types_sensory.html Sensory Memory] | |||
* Sensory memory is the shortest-term element of memory | |||
* Unlike other types of memory, the sensory memory cannot be prolonged via rehearsal | |||
* decays or degrades very quickly, typically in the region of 200 - 500 milliseconds (1/5 - 1/2 second) | |||
* visual stimuli is sometimes known as the iconic memory | |||
* aural stimuli is known as the echoic memory | |||
* touch as the haptic memory | |||
* smell processed in olfactory bulb and olfactory cortex | |||
* smell is strongest as olfactory bulb and olfactory cortex are nearest to the hippocampus | |||
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Meeting with Steve | |||
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Before starting PZI I was planning to look into digital publishing, interactive PDFs, change in technology and publishing, print vs digital. My thesis would have probably been an analysis of a section of publishing. | |||
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At the moment I feel that would be too simple. I'm more interested in creating something I might not get a chance to in the future: a large-scale installation / experience. This would not use a traditional publishing method as a means of communicating my research. | |||
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Do I stick to a topic that interests me and use publishing as a means, rather than analyse publishing itself? | |||
* dance notation is a form of communication / publishing | |||
* experiments as research method | |||
* look at Victor's (fine art) thesis - diagrams | |||
* editorial: how will yo present experiments (event? publication?) | |||
* discrete things & how they come together? | |||
* my practise addresses this, this and that | |||
* these things create chapters, which allow for development | |||
* literacy / non-verbal communication | |||
* Sean v.s. new dance partners | |||
* being a good lead or follow. listening communicating signs / signals. communicating by touch | |||
* notation as a means of instruction | |||
* aim: what am I doing? what do I want to make out of it? | |||
Next steps: | |||
* look through previous experiments | |||
* where will they take me? what experiment will flow next? don't stress, it'll flow | |||
** experiment 1: time perception | |||
** experiment 2: rhythm and notation | |||
** experiment 3: flow | |||
** experiment 4: memory and senses? | |||
** experiment 5: archive? | |||
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===7 SEPT=== | |||
Memories are stored in different senses. | |||
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We see, hear, smell things that remind us of things. Smell is able to bring very powerful flashbacks. | |||
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Can a movement reminds us of something / anything? | |||
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Contact | |||
* Het Danspaleis | |||
* dr Mol / dr Donselaar (Maasstad) | |||
* dr Bert Aldenkamp (Kempenhaeghe) | |||
* therapists? | |||
* bravo europoort - psychiatry specialists / memory tests | |||
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===5 AUG=== | |||
Quartz: [https://qz.com/1045901/reclaiming-my-time-strategies-from-a-scholar-of-chronemics-the-study-of-time/ “Reclaiming my time”: Strategies from a scholar of chronemics, the study of time] | |||
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===6 JULY=== | |||
Tech Insider: [https://www.facebook.com/techinsider/videos/809810459217312/ (video posted on Facebook)] | |||
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Research Gate: [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313822229_Dance_Teaching_by_a_Robot_Combining_Cognitive_and_Physical_Human-Robot_Interaction_for_Supporting_the_Skill_Learning_Process?ev=prf_high Dance Teaching by a Robot: Combining Cognitive and Physical Human–Robot Interaction for Supporting the Skill Learning Process] by Diego Felipe Paez Granados | |||
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New Scientist: [https://www.newscientist.com/article/2132582-waltzing-robot-teaches-beginners-how-to-dance-like-a-pro/ Waltzing robot teaches beginners how to dance like a pro] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
https://d1o50x50snmhul.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/24173757/dir_5.jpg | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===4 JULY=== | |||
Lomography: [https://www.lomography.com/magazine/330101-stereo-photography-an-interview-with-brian-may Stereo Photography: An Interview with Brian May] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===3 JULY=== | |||
Quartz: [https://qz.com/1017316/new-research-to-deal-with-one-of-the-most-emotionally-draining-aspects-of-our-homes-clutter/?utm_source=qzfb New research identifies a simple technique for de-cluttering without heartache] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
"As part of their initial research, (Rebecca Walker) Reczek and her team asked people for ideas of how to preserve memories of physical items. While some suggested scrapbooking or writing journal entries or notes about the items, the overwhelming response was to take photos, which informed their subsequent research. Reczek says she initially expected more elaborate or innovative ideas, but understood that photos are intuitive. “We’re so used to using digital photography, we keep our lives in our phones,” she says. “A lot of time your phone is your memory keeper.” | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===27 JUNE=== | |||
IFLScience: [http://www.iflscience.com/brain/being-forgetful-may-mean-your-brain-is-actually-working-properly/ Being Forgetful May Mean Your Brain Is Actually Working Properly] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===21 JUNE=== | |||
YouTube: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mh9B5UJbbRg How I memorized an entire chapter from “Moby Dick”] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===20 JUNE=== | |||
Vimeo: [https://vimeo.com/214781800 Glow by Jonah Haber] | |||
<br> | |||
[https://www.dailydot.com/debug/how-to-recover-myspace-photos/?fb=ss&prtnr=%E2%80%8Blostateminor How to recover all your embarrassing Myspace photos] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===13 JUNE=== | |||
Frame: [https://www.frameweb.com/news/starring-adam-and-eve-and-a-bathtub Andreas Neumann alternative photos / movies] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===8 JUNE === | |||
YouTube: [https://youtu.be/0EFHbruKEmw Ditch the Label] | |||
<br> | |||
Lomography: [https://www.lomography.com/magazine/330538-refugees-document-life-with-disposable-cameras?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=magazine Refugees Document Life with Disposable Cameras] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===7 JUNE=== | |||
YouTube: [https://youtu.be/ZKSWXzAnVe0 America's Got Talent - Mandy Harvey] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===4 JUNE=== | |||
Vox: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocUNn6KUN6k Why people never smiled in old photos] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
(1:08) ''"To understand the real reason old pictures were so serious, you have to understand what portraits meant to people back then. Remember, before there were photos, portraits were painted. They were time- consuming, long-lasting and one of a kind. That scarcity made the occasion pretty serious and that mentality carried over to early photographs."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''"Mark Twain, a professional humorist, said near the turn of the 20th century that “there is nothing more dating to go down to posterity than a silly, foolish smile caught and fixed forever”. This is a guy who wrote stories about jumping frogs. But his view point was typical."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''"Take for example the oddly popular practise of posing dead bodies for life-like portraits (postmortem photography). The photos weren’t a snapshot, they were a passage to immortality, a record of one’s existence. By looking at the exceptions it’s easier to understand why most portraits were so grim. There were lots of smiling Victorians hiding in photo collections around the world. As early as 1853 Mary Dillwyn captured a boy (William Mansel Llewelyn - nephew) smile on camera. Victorians were not constantly miserable, they just usually got serious when they though a portraits was being taken."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''"As cameras became more common and photography improved, aesthetics changed and smiles returned. Later movies expanded the possibilities of recording real life. Portraiture broke free from the technology and aesthetics of painting. They discovered the possibilities of a new medium."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===31 MAY=== | |||
Vox: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vubuBrcAwtY How obsessive artists colorize old photos] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
Vox: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVnbL5Wm6eY What happens when you bring meditation to public schools] | |||
<br> | |||
[[File: voxhippocampus.png | 600px]] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
Quartz: [https://qz.com/994727/to-succeed-creatively-try-getting-better-at-improvisation/?utm_source=qzfb To succeed creatively, try getting better at improvisation] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''"The bad improviser makes moves that are maladaptive. And the single greatest predictor of quality improv is simply experience. But there’s nothing simple about experience. A great jazz improviser such as Miles Davis had thousands of hours of practice and problem-solving underneath every one of his improvisational flights. This kind of experience makes good improv highly intuitive in a biological sense, not a mystical sense. It taps into the subtle systems of animal awareness, mostly unconscious, that we all possess, such as body-awareness (proprioception), personal space (proxemics), and arousal states such as fight or flight. Muscle memory is loaded with this kind of intuitive wisdom."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
''"Failing is a major aspect of improvisation. Failure is the thing we learn from, so it’s the cornerstone of productive experience. Aristotle described improvisational decision-making as ‘practical reason’, distinct from rule-following logic. He says that young people can become experts in geometry, maths and similar branches of knowledge, but we don’t usually consider a young person to have good improvisational skills. ‘The reason is that [practical reason] includes a knowledge of particular facts, and this is derived from experience, which a young person does not possess; for experience is the fruit of years.’ I think we’ve all known enough young talent to doubt his generalisation about age, but his wider point about experience is correct. And there’s something especially impressive about the deeply experienced improviser, whether conducting a symphony, performing surgery or teaching in a kindergarten."'' | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===24 MAY=== | |||
Vox: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rCIQ1rXfuM How tap dancing was made in America] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
Nishika N8000 | |||
*April 1989 | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
Lomography multi-lens cameras | |||
* [https://shop.lomography.com/nl/cameras/lomography-plastic-fantastic-cameras/actionsampler-clear Action Sampler] | |||
* [https://shop.lomography.com/nl/cameras/lomography-plastic-fantastic-cameras/oktomat Oktomat] | |||
* [https://shop.lomography.com/nl/supersampler-rubberized-black Super Sampler] | |||
<br> | |||
Own Pinterest board: [https://nl.pinterest.com/karinadukalska/illustration-on-photography/ Illustration on Photography] | |||
<br> | |||
<br> | |||
===23 MAY=== | ===23 MAY=== | ||
[http://www.swingplanit.com Swing Plan It:] swing workshops / camps during the summer | [http://www.swingplanit.com Swing Plan It:] swing workshops / camps during the summer |
Latest revision as of 13:27, 5 November 2017
Capturing Memories In Time also used as Thesis Page
previous work that relates:
Psychology of Time
Time Perception in Dance
30 OCT
Vox: Why this awful sounding album is a masterpiece
I love the explanations and supporting visuals to Vox's Earworm podcast by Estelle Caswell. I've added her videos numerous times on this wiki page. All 6 videos available here
Here is another that I missed:
Vox: How a recording studio mishap shaped ’80s music
how to transcribe this video?
try voice to text technique using Google Docs
Feedback from Andre
dance as a system
constants, patterns
mathematical / scientific
formula behind pop songs / jazz songs
generative music, computer write sonata
David Burn (Bob Wilson - Dirty Dozen Brass Band)
Vox relation
notation is not the work, it's the blueprint / a score
Florian - context?
what separates dance and music with resource of score?
music has a way of transmitting score. score is accepted in music, but not in dance - why?
what is this important to you?
look at practitioners that look at memory
search on jstor key terms: dance & memory
Steve Paxton & Trisha Brown
'Material for the Spine'
main problem: not approaching the matter in a way I could deal with
- SongSim looks only at one element (lyrics)
- easy to encapsulate structure
- macro view
can you quantify dance by anything?
write / express BPM differently - shorter distances between lines, show faster BPM
make own notations on Labanotation
Special Issue 02 performance was a two part outcome
- a (graphical) documenting tool that I could personally use in the future
- playful, slightly educational, interactive experience for the audience
this frame could be used for the graduation project too
generative systems
squared paper - each square a second
visualisation
"basing on this, this and that factor, found these variables, time is constant"
WSA - looked at language of time to measure / quantify it
Johanna Drucker - Graphesis
pervious event in NY (Sept 2017)
29 OCT
I want the audience to decode a transcribed dance language (notation)
Figure it out by doing?
Mix and matching layers
Measuring time, time perception
Measuring dance
Dance perception
Decoding the language of dance
Need to describe it to document it
Different ways to describe dance (onomatopoeias, rhythm, scatting, graphical notation, BPM)
What was Laban's aim, drive, purpose?
Impossible to fully archive experience?
I suggest tackling this by making a coding system to capture an intangible object / experience / dance
My frustration? Video is actually a shitty medium to capture dance (an experience).
Aim: propose a new system / method / medium. Hopefully can be used for more experiences than just dance
Language has a key (alphabet) and is spread through word of mouth, contact with people.
The medium to archive it / preserve it (apart from word of mouth) are audio (recordings, songs, radio), visual (books, posters) and audio-visual (plays, films, tv)
How did some languages survive when suppressed during history / wars? Why did some die out? How are they being decoded?
26 OCT
Look for podcasts here
"SON[I]A aims to be an alternative way to receive the information produced during Museum activities; audio information brought to us by characters who take part in activities in and around the MACBA."
Feedback from Marloes and Steve
- 1-2 lines for research question
- if describe practise, what is it about?
- think about reader
25 OCT
why I am so keen on documenting / capturing dance?
previously thought about project to capture the relationship between Sean and I (the urgency was in capturing us before it was too late, before we split ways and before my memory fades) - sadly our splitting came faster than expected
yet I am still focused on notation, memory, the brain, archiving, capturing an experience
what makes it so urgent, so personal?
could it be anything, subconsciously, related to my MS? I do have a fear of losing my ability to dance, of losing my memory (again), of forgetting the memories I am forming now with my new ‘dance family’
I don’t want yet another project related to my health (Mind as a Dossier and Epilepic) in my portfolio. I don’t want to be that designer / creative that always falls back on this topic, possibly showing myself as a victim to pity over. The previous 2 were uplifting, educational, eye-opening, helpful.. but do I really want that to be my thing?
small project idea:
play around with light sensitive material that makes text vanish with time
text can be read for a few seconds after contact with light, then disappears
in order to keep the content of the book documented, photos on the phone should be taken? - will that work? isn’t that more light?
comparison to memory. the book is the knowledge that you have a memory, the content is the memory itself
e.g. “I remember eating dinner last night, but I can’t remember what it was”
Look back at previous texts, The Psychology Of Time Synopsis and Time Perspectives and Cultural Diversity, which look into Philip Zimbardo's time perception. I’d consider myself future TP, always planning ahead, excited about future, sometimes worried
- Past TP - focused on positives
- Past TP - focused on negative
- Present TP - hedonism (focus on joys of life)
- Present TP - fatalism (doesn't matter, life is controlled)
- Future TP - life goal oriented
- Future TP - transcendental (life begins after death or the mortal body)
Anna's feedback (summary from recorded conversation)
- don’t worry about it
- nothing to worry about, reasoning behind the start of the project (why I am doing it?) is not evident in work that is presented
- great to have personal starting point, personal things make great things
- everything you're going to do is going to be some representation of yourself, one way or another
- base of project can be health, go off of it, represent it so it's not read as "poor me, I'm sick"
- talk about archiving dance in a more generalised sense, say what you find interesting
The full conversation will be transcribed from audio soon. Here is a snippet that followed:
- A: have you tried to discover what would be the best way to gather this experience into one medium, or do you have to have multiple mediums?
- K: that's when I started looking into realities, and mixable realities, because if you just focus on one, the more you put data, the more you can express an experience.. although, as a viewer you will never have my experience, you will have your experience. Maybe if you've been to Crete before, then you could re-see what I saw. So you will never manage to get to a point where we can fully have the same experience.
- A: Because that's also based on previous experiences
- K: So it becomes a bias for sure
23 OCT
Feedback from Aymeric
pick one topic
one is not going to be better than the other
what do you really want to dive into?
make it concrete
- notation - non-universal / language specific
- mixable realities - experiencing the intangible
- subculture - transmission of knowledge
- archive - usefulness, temporary, making things public
how would you share / present this?
why interesting? in any other field?
- documentation - graphical / video / notebook
- special awareness - bird's eye view
- time / speed / rhythm - structured 8-count / free-flow scatting
sharing in community
Literate programming by Donald Knuth
interest into education: what's the best way to communicate?
perception
normalise / universal method is questionable
again universal method
subtle / diverse, people are perceiving knowledge differently
thesis structure doesn't need to be scientific
experiments / content / tools / methods as text, not appendices
thesis is distant reflexion
diversity in methods
- topic
- applied to dance
- what's the urgency to look into this topic? - reflect
- cultural diversity (preserve, not normalise world)
- pragmatic (interesting because truth in diversity in education. look into history of educational methods)
- find manner to show collected material
22 OCT
Facebook: Living In The Moment by Jason Silva
11 OCT
Experiment idea:
learn new Lindy steps with a friend using YouTube videos created by own dance school
10 OCT
YouTube: Brain Coupling by Jason Silva
9 OCT
Feedback from Andre
- start small approaches / tests / prototypes / experiments
- explore small themes continuously
- have 3-4 weeks to experiment
- then have 3-4 weeks to reflect on annotation from afar, to narrow down question
- what project could you do in 1 week?
- own note: don't want experiments just conducted by me, it'll be subjective / I know what outcome I want
- how do you represent your outcome? vector image / gif / sound file / sound image
use 3D glasses analogy - experience vs. data
difference in perception
Monoskop: Listening to Noise and Silence: Towards a Philosophy of Sound Art by Salomé Voegelin
sound is fleeting, not attainable
even static image is fleeting / an illusion
Cartographics: a site-specific audio-choreography by Petra Sabisch
strong effects with simple means: headphones; rooftop; mirror(?)
YouTube: Alter Bahnhof Video Walk
wikipedia: Conway's Game of Life
flow-chart-like
make choreographic description, then perform it
to do:
- make one experiment during holiday
- document it in blog / video / graphic notation
- add woman from movement workshop last year onto 'who could help you' list
25 SEPT
Psychology of dance
Dancehub: 5 Interesting Psychological Studies Involving Dancing
(not great source, but has many links to studies related to topic)
- Dancing Improves Your Brain
- Mental Practice Can Lead To Improved Dancing
- The Evolution Of Human Dance May Have Been A Mistake
- Dancers Can Learn Routines In Different Ways
- Girls Under Age 16 Have The Most Dancing Confidence
1. Dancing Improves Your Brain
Psychology Today: Why Is Dancing So Good for Your Brain?
more references / cited studies about how dancing can improve the brain
2. Mental Practice Can Lead To Improved Dancing
University of California Santa Clara Cruz: UCSC dance research published in prestigious Psychology Science journal
3. The Evolution Of Human Dance May Have Been A Mistake
American Psychological Association: Dance, dance evolution
not many animals have close connections between auditory and motor skills
"Psychologists’ research on the power of movement is giving us insight into why we first danced and how cultures built on that ancient impulse."
4. Dancers Can Learn Routines In Different Ways
Duke Chronicle: Research investigates the science behind dance
5. Girls Under Age 16 Have The Most Dancing Confidence (not related?)
The Guardian: Why do people dance?
---
Springer: Thinking in action: thought made visible in contemporary dance by Catherine Stevens and Shirley McKechnie
Buy entire journal for EUR 42.29
or find through HR mediatheek
download links here
link to downloaded file
Abstract
Contemporary dance—movement deliberately and systematically cultivated for its own sake—is examined in the light of the procedural and declarative view of long-term knowledge. We begin with a description of two settings in which new works of contemporary dance are created and performed. Although non-verbal, contemporary dance can be a language declared through movement and stillness of the body. Ideas for new movement material come from objects, events or imaginings that are spoken, seen, heard, imagined, or felt. Declared through movement, the idea becomes visible. Communication in dance involves general psychological processes such as direct visual perception of motion and force, motor simulation via mirror neurons, and implicit learning of movement vocabularies and grammars. Creating and performing dance appear to involve both procedural and declarative knowledge. The latter includes the role of episodic memory in performance and occasional labelling of movement phrases and sections in rehearsal. Procedural knowledge in dance is augmented by expressive nuance, feeling and communicative intent that is not characteristic of other movement-based procedural tasks. Having delineated lexical and grammatical components in dance, neural mechanisms are identified based on Ullman’s (Ullman in Cognition 92:231–270, 2004) alignment of lexical knowledge with declarative memory and mental grammar with procedural memory. We conclude with suggestions for experiments to test these assumptions that concern thought in action in composition, performance and appreciation of contemporary dance.
check out their 60+ references
reference if want to add to own bibliography
Stevens, Catherine; McKechnie, Shirley (2005). "Thinking in action: Thought made visible in contemporary dance". Cognitive Processing. 6 (4): 243–252. doi:10.1007/s10339-005-0014-x.
Jstor: A Nonverbal Language for Imagining and Learning: Dance Education in K-12 Curriculum by Judith Lynne Hanna
20 SEPT
ABC Radio: Songlines: the Indigenous memory code
Japing Aboriginal Art: Why Songlines Are Important In Aboriginal Art
Amazon: Computer Power and Human Reason: From Judgment to Calculation by Joseph Weizenbaum (1976)
13 SEPT
look into: scatting as a measurement of time in dance
- it gives more possibilities (to distinguish the 4-'a'-5 counts)
- look into history, how / why / when it originated - Harlem late 1920s?
- learn to scat? what is important that may not seem obvious?
13 SEPT
Human Memory: Sensory Memory
- Sensory memory is the shortest-term element of memory
- Unlike other types of memory, the sensory memory cannot be prolonged via rehearsal
- decays or degrades very quickly, typically in the region of 200 - 500 milliseconds (1/5 - 1/2 second)
- visual stimuli is sometimes known as the iconic memory
- aural stimuli is known as the echoic memory
- touch as the haptic memory
- smell processed in olfactory bulb and olfactory cortex
- smell is strongest as olfactory bulb and olfactory cortex are nearest to the hippocampus
Meeting with Steve
Before starting PZI I was planning to look into digital publishing, interactive PDFs, change in technology and publishing, print vs digital. My thesis would have probably been an analysis of a section of publishing.
At the moment I feel that would be too simple. I'm more interested in creating something I might not get a chance to in the future: a large-scale installation / experience. This would not use a traditional publishing method as a means of communicating my research.
Do I stick to a topic that interests me and use publishing as a means, rather than analyse publishing itself?
- dance notation is a form of communication / publishing
- experiments as research method
- look at Victor's (fine art) thesis - diagrams
- editorial: how will yo present experiments (event? publication?)
- discrete things & how they come together?
- my practise addresses this, this and that
- these things create chapters, which allow for development
- literacy / non-verbal communication
- Sean v.s. new dance partners
- being a good lead or follow. listening communicating signs / signals. communicating by touch
- notation as a means of instruction
- aim: what am I doing? what do I want to make out of it?
Next steps:
- look through previous experiments
- where will they take me? what experiment will flow next? don't stress, it'll flow
- experiment 1: time perception
- experiment 2: rhythm and notation
- experiment 3: flow
- experiment 4: memory and senses?
- experiment 5: archive?
7 SEPT
Memories are stored in different senses.
We see, hear, smell things that remind us of things. Smell is able to bring very powerful flashbacks.
Can a movement reminds us of something / anything?
Contact
- Het Danspaleis
- dr Mol / dr Donselaar (Maasstad)
- dr Bert Aldenkamp (Kempenhaeghe)
- therapists?
- bravo europoort - psychiatry specialists / memory tests
5 AUG
Quartz: “Reclaiming my time”: Strategies from a scholar of chronemics, the study of time
6 JULY
Tech Insider: (video posted on Facebook)
Research Gate: Dance Teaching by a Robot: Combining Cognitive and Physical Human–Robot Interaction for Supporting the Skill Learning Process by Diego Felipe Paez Granados
New Scientist: Waltzing robot teaches beginners how to dance like a pro
4 JULY
Lomography: Stereo Photography: An Interview with Brian May
3 JULY
Quartz: New research identifies a simple technique for de-cluttering without heartache
"As part of their initial research, (Rebecca Walker) Reczek and her team asked people for ideas of how to preserve memories of physical items. While some suggested scrapbooking or writing journal entries or notes about the items, the overwhelming response was to take photos, which informed their subsequent research. Reczek says she initially expected more elaborate or innovative ideas, but understood that photos are intuitive. “We’re so used to using digital photography, we keep our lives in our phones,” she says. “A lot of time your phone is your memory keeper.”
27 JUNE
IFLScience: Being Forgetful May Mean Your Brain Is Actually Working Properly
21 JUNE
YouTube: How I memorized an entire chapter from “Moby Dick”
20 JUNE
Vimeo: Glow by Jonah Haber
How to recover all your embarrassing Myspace photos
13 JUNE
Frame: Andreas Neumann alternative photos / movies
8 JUNE
YouTube: Ditch the Label
Lomography: Refugees Document Life with Disposable Cameras
7 JUNE
YouTube: America's Got Talent - Mandy Harvey
4 JUNE
Vox: Why people never smiled in old photos
(1:08) "To understand the real reason old pictures were so serious, you have to understand what portraits meant to people back then. Remember, before there were photos, portraits were painted. They were time- consuming, long-lasting and one of a kind. That scarcity made the occasion pretty serious and that mentality carried over to early photographs."
"Mark Twain, a professional humorist, said near the turn of the 20th century that “there is nothing more dating to go down to posterity than a silly, foolish smile caught and fixed forever”. This is a guy who wrote stories about jumping frogs. But his view point was typical."
"Take for example the oddly popular practise of posing dead bodies for life-like portraits (postmortem photography). The photos weren’t a snapshot, they were a passage to immortality, a record of one’s existence. By looking at the exceptions it’s easier to understand why most portraits were so grim. There were lots of smiling Victorians hiding in photo collections around the world. As early as 1853 Mary Dillwyn captured a boy (William Mansel Llewelyn - nephew) smile on camera. Victorians were not constantly miserable, they just usually got serious when they though a portraits was being taken."
"As cameras became more common and photography improved, aesthetics changed and smiles returned. Later movies expanded the possibilities of recording real life. Portraiture broke free from the technology and aesthetics of painting. They discovered the possibilities of a new medium."
31 MAY
Vox: How obsessive artists colorize old photos
Vox: What happens when you bring meditation to public schools
Quartz: To succeed creatively, try getting better at improvisation
"The bad improviser makes moves that are maladaptive. And the single greatest predictor of quality improv is simply experience. But there’s nothing simple about experience. A great jazz improviser such as Miles Davis had thousands of hours of practice and problem-solving underneath every one of his improvisational flights. This kind of experience makes good improv highly intuitive in a biological sense, not a mystical sense. It taps into the subtle systems of animal awareness, mostly unconscious, that we all possess, such as body-awareness (proprioception), personal space (proxemics), and arousal states such as fight or flight. Muscle memory is loaded with this kind of intuitive wisdom."
"Failing is a major aspect of improvisation. Failure is the thing we learn from, so it’s the cornerstone of productive experience. Aristotle described improvisational decision-making as ‘practical reason’, distinct from rule-following logic. He says that young people can become experts in geometry, maths and similar branches of knowledge, but we don’t usually consider a young person to have good improvisational skills. ‘The reason is that [practical reason] includes a knowledge of particular facts, and this is derived from experience, which a young person does not possess; for experience is the fruit of years.’ I think we’ve all known enough young talent to doubt his generalisation about age, but his wider point about experience is correct. And there’s something especially impressive about the deeply experienced improviser, whether conducting a symphony, performing surgery or teaching in a kindergarten."
24 MAY
Vox: How tap dancing was made in America
Nishika N8000
- April 1989
Lomography multi-lens cameras
Own Pinterest board: Illustration on Photography
23 MAY
Swing Plan It: swing workshops / camps during the summer
21 - 25 June: Swing Crash Festival (Como, Italy)
1 July - 5 August: Herrang Dance Camp (Herrang, Sweden)
8 - 15 July: Swing Summit (Ardeche, France)
10 July - 18 August: Swing Step (Berlin, Germany)
17 - 20 August: Amber Swing (Gdansk, Poland)
21 - 27 August: Big Experience (Avila, Spain)
Ted Talks: Gabriel Barcia-Colombo: Capturing memories in video art
Gabriel Barcia Colombo's portfolio / website
22 MAY
Outdoor swing practice Roffa Swing Gasshopper
- learned new steps
- idea to make jive workshop: need to practice on others
- found a site - Swing Plan It - that lists many swing events in the summer
Vox: Magic Eye: The optical illusion, explained
Audible: Camera Obscura
21 MAY
Trip to Gemeentemuseum in Den Haag
Wonderkamers: holograms and dancing games
19 MAY
second social dance
- fears are broken
- have more energy
- feel happier
- got taught new moves by a skilled dancer
- managed to flow into unknown to me charleston moves
- got introduced to Herrang summer camp
18 MAY
first social dance: RoffaSwingPraktijk Delfshaven
- fear of going on my own
- fear of being a newbie
- got introduced to ‘shag’
- taught a little of charleston, got positive feedback
15 MAY
Vox: How wildlife films warp time
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpbmWqQMzq0
- Slow Motion - increasing camera frame rate to not lose quality
- Time lapse - (opposite of slow motion) fewer frames over a longer period of time
- Hyperlaspe - stitching many photos together / "takes you on a journey"
Russian Ark (2002)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318034/
Vox: How the BBC makes Planet Earth look like a Hollywood movie
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAOKOJhzYXk
"The camera is never static" - Mike Gunston
"feels more immersive / connected"
14 MAY
Insight into ballroom & latin dance class:
Sean and I haven't danced together in 5 weeks. Before the class started I was wondering whether we would be able to fall right back into flow - regarding both steps and our bond in dancing. Neither of us practised any of the routines since the last class, yet I was fairly optimistic. The class did focus on latin (cha cha, rumba, jive, samba and pasodoble) which we felt more familiar - and relaxed - with.
For a warmup we got given a quickstep (ballroom). Sean was not reading me, our connection was weak, he only remembered the basic step, I did not remember the most recent (gold) steps. It felt chaotic and slightly disappointing. I knew that a small break would cause us to loose focus, skill and memory, but I wasn't expecting it to be that bad. Thankfully after a song or two we could forget about this failure and move on.
Cha cha. Alright, hopes rose again. Sean leaned in and whispered that we probably have this engraved in the back of our heads. [Note: sometimes before starting a new style, we encourage each other that we have it under control / we can ace it / we got this. It really does help our morale]. Indeed, cha cha went fairly smoothly, although Sean did forget a step or two here and there. He clapped too early in one step and laughed it off saying that he was just too excited. Morale up!
Rumba. Our least favourite dance for years, but we're trying to see it as a challange now. Rumba is slow, sweet and romantic - very contrasting to our relationship and dynamic. Nevertheless, with the newest additions in the gold level, there are more complex turns that require technique and full focus. Last time our teacher gave us feedback and suggested we really stretch our legs with each step to make it look more professional. Keeping that in mind, the dance became a game. During todays class we struggled with getting the last steps right, although we managed to dance them flawlessly months ago. It took a few tries to get back on track. The teachers noticed us struggle a little.
Jive. Our signature dance! No problems there. One of the teachers glanced at us and smiled right as it was announced jive was next. She knew that we have this covered. It felt like our dynamic was back on track too. No forgotten steps, good leading, complete flow, smooth as butter.
Samba. It was nice to see our teachers go over it once before it was our turn. I think we would have managed without a recap, but it eased my mind slightly. I don't think we had any problems there either.
Pasodoble. Also aced it. Half way through the lead teacher asked me to assist him - as his partner was busy - and we showed the routine to the rest of the class. Pretty honoured whenever this happens and I don't screw up, yet laughing it off whenever I do.
Overall conclusion
- we need to go over quickstep because we forgot most of it
- took us ±10-15 minutes to get into it / feeling confident / not making mistakes
- rumba still needs some work, but leg stretching challange eases the slow, romantic drag
- I'm very excited to get together with Sean and introduce him to the world of Swing / Lindy Hop / Charleston
- teaching Swing to Sean could be one of my future dance experiments
- we need to meet up more often and practise all ballroom and latin styles
- creating this tool to help us recap choreography could really make a difference
11 MAY
First Lindy Hop class
9 MAY
First Charleston class:
Everyone was sweating profoundly within the first 5 minutes.
I was absolutely amazed by the ease with which they introduced us to this style. I was aware that the footwork is a little crazy, as there is fast kicking front, back, with left and right feet, and you need to memorise with foot goes where at what time. The rhythm is also a little funky and I didn't fully understand it that one random time I was quickly shown by a class mate.
As suggested, I did a little stretching once I got home. I tried to remember the stretching techniques from my dance camps from when I was 10 years old - these tips still come in handy! I must have forgotten a few, because later that night I could feel my gluteus were on fire.
30 APRIL
Fritz Kahn: Infographics Pioneer
https://www.amazon.com/Fritz-Kahn-Infographics-Uta-Debschitz/dp/3836504936?tag=georiot-cbq-de-21&ascsubtag=cbq-1920596410-20
[ idea: draw immune system attacking neurones ]
19 APRIL
Methods Capturing Memory in Time draft
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_of_loci
- Rock Step - Triple Step - Triple Step for DE PLAYER
- Time Perception in Dance essay
18 APRIL
https://www.simplypsychology.org/memory.html
20 MARCH
Lars & Marley Justtin - Lovestoned
recorded dance rehearsal in the studio
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J_2TVDULoN0&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=3
How to Do Beginner Footwork | Bachata Dance
recorded in green room (?) - static camera view
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TurPFqF0Meg
Major Lazer - "Watch out for this" dance super video by DHQ Fraules
weak storyline forced into a choreography
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8W_1vg7W6Oo&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=34
"Medicine" - A Dance Film
strikingly strong storyline enriches / shapes the choreography
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5NaiEBoe48&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=42&t=196s
SLIP | @PhillipChbeeb & Renee Kester | @ElliotMossMusic
storyline works with the choreography
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qk00gbDwGqM&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=64
"Witchcraft" - A Dance Film
simple and sweet storyline works along (but does not shape) the choreography
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pbc8aN9gsSo&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=80
Sep & Alexia in Rotterdam, dancing to Dr. Bernard and his Swing Cats!
recorded freestyle during event
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYHVXWv6yjc&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=79
Justin Peck and Janie Taylor, for the Block Magazine
recorded in the studio, but not static and has simple storyline
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oy74aAFhB6o&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=68
Sergei Polunin, "Take Me to Church" by Hozier, Directed by David LaChapelle
simple storyline, focuses on dance and film technique
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-tW0CkvdDI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDfVEZlnaOc&list=PLlAwKn2nfe-FwIBW9rm6P6K2Nw5V5Lb9c&index=82 - behind the scenes
100 years of fashion in 100 seconds
no storyline, cut into many small segments. focuses on evolution of fashion, time is shown through dance
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prDS8EdsOUA
21 FEBRUARY
William J. Friedman - the strength model vs the inference model talk about long term / short term memory and how it is prioritised, how it fades, but also how there is no difference
Lauren Slater - Opening Skinner’s Box (chapter 9 - Memory Inc.)
- Scoville’s discovery of the role of the hippocampus by operating on Henry M.
- Milner’s distinction of procedural memory, which further led to the distinction of semantic and declarative memory
- Eric Kandel’s interest in H.M. and alternative further research on sea slugs (bigger neurons) altered Skinner’s and Pavlov’s “learning theory” into “memory”
27 JANUARY
https://www.netflix.com/watch/80049951?trackId=13772707&tctx=5%2C1%2C972f973e-82c9-4ca3-85a3-f7bb6fa0395d-50649825
Skip to 27:00
8 JANUARY
Opening Skinner's Box by Lauren Slater
Chapel 8: Lost in the Mail: The False Memory Experiment (pages 182-204)
Chapel 9: Memory Inc.: Eric Kandel's Sea Slug Experiment (pages 205-223)
hippocampus stores memory