6 research outputs found

    Sonic Interactions in Virtual Environments

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    Sonic interactions in virtual environments

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    This book tackles the design of 3D spatial interactions in an audio-centered and audio-first perspective, providing the fundamental notions related to the creation and evaluation of immersive sonic experiences. The key elements that enhance the sensation of place in a virtual environment (VE) are: Immersive audio: the computational aspects of the acoustical-space properties of Virutal Reality (VR) technologies Sonic interaction: the human-computer interplay through auditory feedback in VE VR systems: naturally support multimodal integration, impacting different application domains Sonic Interactions in Virtual Environments will feature state-of-the-art research on real-time auralization, sonic interaction design in VR, quality of the experience in multimodal scenarios, and applications. Contributors and editors include interdisciplinary experts from the fields of computer science, engineering, acoustics, psychology, design, humanities, and beyond. Their mission is to shape an emerging new field of study at the intersection of sonic interaction design and immersive media, embracing an archipelago of existing research spread in different audio communities and to increase among the VR communities, researchers, and practitioners, the awareness of the importance of sonic elements when designing immersive environments

    Waste in the tropics: Urban environments and (post) colonial infrastructure in Kochi, India

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    n 2015, the Kochi government—the Cochin Corporation—announced it was planning to replace a controversial landfill on the outskirts of the city with a waste-to-energy incinerator. This incinerator was to stop unscientific landfill practices from leaching into nearby waterways and to solve the issue of plastic waste accumulating in Kochi’s famous backwaters—a series of brackish canals and lakes that the city rests within. These plans coincided with a national agenda of waste reform promoted by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his successful election campaign in 2014. However, when I arrived in Kochi in January 2018 the waste-to-energy incinerator was still yet to be installed, caught between a dilapidated landfill, a national policy promoting waste-to-energy infrastructure, and a wet tropical environment that made this infrastructure illogical and unviable. In this thesis I critique the claim to the universality of infrastructures to solve waste management crises and suggest that situated environmental conditions need to be front and centre of discussions about urban governance. Through an ethnographic study of this controversy, I draw on scholarship in environmental anthropology, science and technology studies, and the burgeoning field of discard studies to explain why Kochi continues to attempt to adopt incineration infrastructure to solve a waste crisis despite its ill-suitedness to the tropical conditions of coastal South India. I expand on discussions within these fields by drawing together the (post)colonial history of infrastructure in Kochi and the specific material and capitalist histories of plastics. I also work with the situated concepts of wet and dry—as the categories of both tropical weather and waste systems—to extend ethnographic attention to tropical environments that includes the affective atmospheres and experiences of those environments. I argue that there is a need to expand what is relevant to discussions about urban governance to include specific (post)colonial histories of environmental change, the capitalist and material history of disposable plastics, and the ideological functioning of infrastructure. Part of this reckoning with colonial and material histories requires reimagining relationships between environment and infrastructure. This reimagining involves an unworking of the colonial inheritances of speed and convenience associated with infrastructural development that promotes capitalist growth. Informed by 16 months in India, and 10 months of ethnographic fieldwork in Kochi between January 2018 and April 2019, my observations are drawn primarily from participant observation with waste activists in their advocacy throughout the city. I also draw on over 100 semi-structured interviews with environmental activists, waste workers, architects, academics, politicians, artists, and everyday citizens. Together these methods help to tell the story of a city grappling at once with the toxicity of a plastic waste crisis, the inheritances of large-scale environmental change from British rule in the early 20th century, and decades of postcolonial urban development based on extractive and polluting industries. Ultimately, the thesis provides a timely contribution to the pressing issue of plastic waste management in (post)colonial cities, while also extending recent debates on the intersection of environment and infrastructure.Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Social Sciences, 202

    Branding the Middle East: Communication Strategies and Image Building from Qom to Casablanca

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    This edited volume investigates place, product, and personal branding in the Middle East and North Africa, including some studies from adjacent regions and the wider Islamicate world. Going beyond simply presenting logos and slogans, it critically analyses processes of strategic communication and image building under general conditions of globalisation, neoliberalisation, and postmodernisation and, in a regional perspective, of lasting authoritarian rule and increased endeavours for "worlding." In particular, it looks at the multiple actors involved in branding activities, their interests and motives, and investigates tools, channels, and forms of branding. A major interest exists in the entanglements of different spatial scales and in the (in)consistencies of communication measures. Attention is paid to reconfigurations of certain images over time and to the positioning of objects of branding in time and space. Historical case studies supplement the focus on contemporary branding efforts. While branding in the Western world and many emerging economies has been meticulously analysed, this edited volume fills an important gap in the research on MENA countrie

    Safety and Reliability - Safe Societies in a Changing World

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    The contributions cover a wide range of methodologies and application areas for safety and reliability that contribute to safe societies in a changing world. These methodologies and applications include: - foundations of risk and reliability assessment and management - mathematical methods in reliability and safety - risk assessment - risk management - system reliability - uncertainty analysis - digitalization and big data - prognostics and system health management - occupational safety - accident and incident modeling - maintenance modeling and applications - simulation for safety and reliability analysis - dynamic risk and barrier management - organizational factors and safety culture - human factors and human reliability - resilience engineering - structural reliability - natural hazards - security - economic analysis in risk managemen
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