128 research outputs found

    Expecting space:an enactive and active inference approach to transitions

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    Midamble

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    Alice through the telescope: A critical autoethnography of an (almost) participatory research process

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    Social marketing is a technique for behavioural change that has been around since the 1960s, when prominent academics argued that the tools and techniques of marketing could be used for social as well as commercial ends. More recently, the orthodox approach to social marketing - based on the marketing management paradigm - has been challenged and new approaches are emerging. One such development has been characterised loosely as ‘co creation’, which in a social marketing context is understood to mean behavioural change interventions that are developed collaboratively with the target audience, rather than by remote experts.I present here an autoethnographic study of an 18-month ‘co-created’ social marketing project that sought to reduce risky drinking in two deprived neighbourhoods. Locating myself epistemologically within the post structural approach articulated by critical sociologists (e.g. Laurel Richardson and Norman Denzin), I have written two analytical stories about the project based upon field notes, project documents, emails and recollections. One story is akin to a thick description, the second organised around four emergent themes: negative space, legitimacy, resistance and performativity.Drawing upon literature from participatory research, international development and activist scholarship, I present a contribution in three parts. First, a detailed ethical and epistemological critique of social marketing’s claims to legitimacy as a methodology of social change; second, the development and theoretical justification of autoethnographic writing as a method for analysing participatory and action research projects; and finally, an exploration of the relationship between identity (internally cultivated and externally imposed), social inequality and social activism via evocative writing as “the very possibility of change” (Cixous, 1976, p. 879)

    Motor intention in the posterior parietal cortex:experimental data analysis and functional modeling study

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    The complexity of processes occurring in the brain is an intriguing issue not just for scientists and medical doctors, but the humanity in general. The cortex ability to perceive and analyze an enormous amount of information in an instance of time, the parallelism and computational efficiency are among the questions that attract attention. Even a simple, everyday gesture, for example, reaching for a cup of coffee, evokes a flow of signals in the brain. It goes from the primary visual region, that locates the cup on the table, to the primary motor region that sends the precise coordinates to the hand, and the instruction what to do next. The sequence of signal transmission and transformation continues through several regions, sensory, associative and motor ones. In this study, we will focus on the posterior parietal cortex, the region involved in the transformation of visual inputs into the preliminary motor plans. The years of experimental work revealed mechanisms for integration of multimodal signals, coordinate transformations, information representation in multiple coordinate frames, and many other. Still, a single encompassing theory about movement generation in the parietal cortex does not exist, and is a matter of debate. This study contributes to the analysis of motor intention in the 7a parietal region. The motor intention, a high-level cognitive signal, is defined as the preliminary plan for making a movement. From the engineering point of view, encoding of motor parameters in the neural activity is extensively studied within the framework of brain-computer interfaces. The motivation behind these studies is the development of neural prosthesis for the paralyzed persons. The direct cortical prosthesis can significantly improve the lives of paralyzed people, who have lost every other contact with the outside world. Also, this framework opens the possibilities for monitoring the neural processes during the execution of natural movements, and studying the mechanisms behind it. In this work, a method for identification of motor intention from the standard recordings of neural activity, the spike trains, is developed. The data of interest was collected in a series of behavioral experiments involving reaching or saccadic eye movements. The presence and absence of motor intention was monitored in various phases of motion execution, and for different types of movements. All the recordings obtained simultaneously are combined in the same decoding session. Therefore, the analysis is done using the activity of small population of cells (typically 8 to 12 cells). We aim to study the motor intention in a general context which requires using activity of multiple cells. The population size is determined by the experimental procedure. Throughout this study we assume that the motor intention can be red from the spike rates, the assumption supported by the neurophysiological studies. Therefore, all the simultaneously collected spike trains are converted into vectors of spike rates. The results of this study show that motor intention can be decoded from the spike rates. A machine-learning based algorithm is developed to analyze the presence or absence of motor intention in the obtained spike rate vectors. This algorithm, based on standard support vector machines, can distinguish between the segments of recordings that encode motor intention, from those that do not encode it. The goal of the study was to examine the precision of motor intention identification, when the activity of a randomly selected set of cells is analyzed using on such algorithm. Additionally, several relevant parameters were tested. The algorithm precision during different phases of movement execution is tested. Also, the influence of the population size and of the procedure for spike rates computation is examined. The obtained results demonstrated that the motor intention can be extracted from the neural signals with the precision of around 70% for a randomly selected set of cells. For the best groups of cells, this precision was 82%. The motor intention identification was particularly precise during the intervals of preparation and realization of saccadic eye movements. This is in accordance with the known functions of the 7a region, where the majority of cells respond to the eye movements. The algorithm precision is determined by the considered population size. For the bigger population the precision increases. Still, this conclusion holds only on average, since adding one or a couple of randomly selected cells does not have to change the result. Randomly selected cells do not necessary carry the information of interest. The influence of each of the cells, present in one set, is tested in this context. The obtained results indicate redundant coding of motor intention in the parietal cortex. Many cells carry the same information, and some of them can be removed from the set without changing the algorithm precision. Still, removing all of them degrades the result. Finally, the influence of the window size, used to compute spike rates in some of the tests is studied. In general, the precision improves when using bigger windows, the result that is consistent with the literature. Introducing the window for computing spike rates enables automatic identification of motor intention, the method suitable for the brain-computer interface applications. Finally, the analysis of the experimental data is complemented with the study of an appropriately designed model. Modeling the biological processes, in order to reveal additional functionality and test some parameters not accessible through the data, is a widely accepted approach. Still, the development of a model, sufficiently simple for implementation on the standard hardware, sufficiently tractable in the simulations, yet informative enough to capture the main processes of interest, is not straightforward. Our motivation for accepting this approach was to test several parameters that imposed themselves as important in the data analysis step. Due to the nature of the problem itself, the test on an approximative model was the only feasible tactic. The influence of the population size and the window size was assessed in this study. This, additionally, demonstrated the algorithm precision scaling as a function of the number of cells

    Presence 2005: the eighth annual international workshop on presence, 21-23 September, 2005 University College London (Conference proceedings)

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    OVERVIEW (taken from the CALL FOR PAPERS) Academics and practitioners with an interest in the concept of (tele)presence are invited to submit their work for presentation at PRESENCE 2005 at University College London in London, England, September 21-23, 2005. The eighth in a series of highly successful international workshops, PRESENCE 2005 will provide an open discussion forum to share ideas regarding concepts and theories, measurement techniques, technology, and applications related to presence, the psychological state or subjective perception in which a person fails to accurately and completely acknowledge the role of technology in an experience, including the sense of 'being there' experienced by users of advanced media such as virtual reality. The concept of presence in virtual environments has been around for at least 15 years, and the earlier idea of telepresence at least since Minsky's seminal paper in 1980. Recently there has been a burst of funded research activity in this area for the first time with the European FET Presence Research initiative. What do we really know about presence and its determinants? How can presence be successfully delivered with today's technology? This conference invites papers that are based on empirical results from studies of presence and related issues and/or which contribute to the technology for the delivery of presence. Papers that make substantial advances in theoretical understanding of presence are also welcome. The interest is not solely in virtual environments but in mixed reality environments. Submissions will be reviewed more rigorously than in previous conferences. High quality papers are therefore sought which make substantial contributions to the field. Approximately 20 papers will be selected for two successive special issues for the journal Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments. PRESENCE 2005 takes place in London and is hosted by University College London. The conference is organized by ISPR, the International Society for Presence Research and is supported by the European Commission's FET Presence Research Initiative through the Presencia and IST OMNIPRES projects and by University College London

    Monospace and Multiverse

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    In contrast to buildings divided by walls, monospace buildings are determined far less by its shell than by a reciprocal relationship between space and practices, objects, materials, and human bodies. Using the example of such one-room-architectures, this book explores the potential of an actor-network-theory (ANT) approach to space in the field of architecture. Sabine Hansmann focuses on the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts in Norwich, England by Foster Associates (1978) to investigate the mutual entanglement of people, objects and building. She traces the work that is necessary in »doing« space and thus suggests a re-conceptualisation of space in architectural theory
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