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Report on Work from October 2011 to August 2012 as University Learning Development Associate for Curriculum Development and for Learning Environments
Language as a disruptive technology: Abstract concepts, embodiment and the flexible mind
A growing body of evidence suggests that cognition is embodied and grounded. Abstract concepts, though, remain a significant theoretical chal- lenge. A number of researchers have proposed that language makes an important contribution to our capacity to acquire and employ concepts, particularly abstract ones. In this essay, I critically examine this suggestion and ultimately defend a version of it. I argue that a successful account of how language augments cognition should emphasize its symbolic properties and incorporate a view of embodiment that recognizes the flexible, multi- modal and task-related nature of action, emotion and perception systems. On this view, language is an ontogenetically disruptive cognitive technology that expands our conceptual reach
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Report on work from April 2010 to July 2011 as Cass Learning Development Associate
Three symbol ungrounding problems: Abstract concepts and the future of embodied cognition
A great deal of research has focused on the question of whether or not concepts are embodied as a rule. Supporters of embodiment have pointed to studies that implicate affective and sensorimotor systems in cognitive tasks, while critics of embodiment have offered nonembodied explanations of these results and pointed to studies that implicate amodal systems. Abstract concepts have tended to be viewed as an important test case in this polemical debate. This essay argues that we need to move beyond a pretheoretical notion of abstraction. Against the background of current research and theory, abstract concepts do not pose a single, unified problem for embodied cognition but, instead, three distinct problems: the problem of generalization, the problem of flexibility, and the problem of disembodiment. Identifying these problems provides a conceptual framework for critically evaluating, and perhaps improving upon, recent theoretical proposals
Ăâkologische und genetische Differenzierung von Daphnia-galeata-Populationen in Europa
Here I analyse 23 populations of D. galeata, a large-lake cladoceran, distributed mainly across the Palaearctic. I detected high levels of clonal diversity and population differentiation using variation at six microsatellite loci across Europe. Most populations were characterised by deviations from H-W equilibrium and significant heterozygote deficiencies. Observed heterozygote deficiencies might be a consequence of simultaneous hatching of individuals produced during different times of the year or of the coexistence of ecologically and genetically differentiated subpopulations. A significant isolation by distance was only found over large geographic distances (> 700 km). This pattern is mainly due to the high genetic differentiation among neighbouring populations. My results suggest that historic populations of Daphnia were once interconnected by gene flow but current populations are now largely isolated. Thus local ecological conditions which determine the level of biparental sexual reproduction and local adaptation are the main factors mediating population structure of D. galeata. The population genetic structure and diversity in D. galeata was investigated at a European scale using six microsatellite loci and 12S rDNA sequence data to infer and compare historical and contemporary patterns of gene flow. D. galeata has the potential for long-distance dispersal via ephippial resting eggs by wind and other dispersing vectors (waterfowl), but shows in general strong population differentiation even among neighbouring populations. A total of 427 individuals were analysed for microsatellite and 85 individuals for mitochondrial (mtDNA) sequence data from 12 populations across Europe. I detected genetic differentiation among populations across Europe and locations within sampling regions for both genetic marker systems (average values: mtDNA FST = 0.574; microsatellite FST = 0.389), resulting in a lack of isolation by distance. Furthermore, several microsatellite alleles and one haplotype were shared across populations. Partitioning of molecular variance was inconsistant for both marker systems. Microsatellite variation was higher within than among populations, whereas mtDNA data yielded an inverse pattern. Relative high levels of nuclear DNA diversity were found across Europe. The amount of mitochondrial diversity was low in Spain, Hungary and Denmark. Gene flow analysis at a European scale did not reveal typical pattern of population recolonization in the light of postglacial colonization hypotheses. Populations, which recently experienced an expansion or population-bottleneck were observed both in middle and northern Europe. Since these populations revealed high genetic diversity in both marker systems, I suggest these areas to represent postglacial zones of secondary contact among divergent lineages of D. galeata. In order to reveal the relationship between population genetic structure of D. galeata and the relative contribution of environmental factors, I used a statistical framework based on canonical correspondence analysis. Although I detected no single ecological gradient mediating the genetic differentiation in either lake regions, it is noteworthy that the same ecological factors were significantly correlated with intra- and interspecific genetic variation of D. galeata. For example, I found a relationship between genetic variation of D. galeata and differentiation with higher and lower trophic levels (phytoplankton, submerged macrophytes and fish) and a relationship between clonal variation and species diversity within Cladocera. Variance partitioning had only a minor contribution of each environmental category (abiotic, biomass/density and diversity) to genetic diversity of D. galeata, while the largest proportion of variation was explained by shared components. My work illustrates the important role of ecological differentiation and adaptation in structuring genetic variation, and it highlights the need for approaches incorporating a landscape context for population divergence.In dieser Promotionsarbeit habe ich die genetische Populationsstruktur von Daphnia galeata Hyalodaphnia-Komplex (Crustacea: Anomopoda) anhand von sechs nukleĂ€ren Markern (Microsatelliten Loci) von 23 Seen aus ganz Europa untersucht (Kapitel 2). Um einen möglichen Zusammenhang zwischen historischen Prozessen und der rezenten genetischen Struktur von D. galeata-Populationen herzustellen, wurden anhand einer weiteren vergleichenden Analyse basierend auf Sequenz- (mitochondriale 12S rDNA) und Microsatelliten-Daten 12 Populationen auf phylogeographische Muster untersucht (Kapitel 3). Anhand von Korrelationsanalysen wurde weiterhin getestet, ob und wie diese genetische Struktur von Umweltfaktoren beeinflusst wird (Kapitel 4). Ziel der Arbeit war es Faktoren und Prozesse herauszuarbeiten, die die genetische Struktur innerhalb und zwischen Populationen einer zyklisch parthenogenetischen Art beinflussen und formen. Meine Analysen ergaben signifikant niedrige Heterozygotie-Werte bezĂŒglich der Erwartungen des Hardy-Weinberg Gleichgewicht, was auf eine hohe genetische Strukturierung hinweist. Eine ErklĂ€rung fĂŒr die niedrigen Heterozygotie-Werte kann eine allochronische, d.h. zeitlich versetzte Isolation von genetischen Linien sein, die entweder durch Generationen oder eine ökologische Differenzierung getrennt sind. Meine Ergebnisse in Kapitel 2 Ă€hneln eher der Populationsstruktur von Arten, die in instabilen GewĂ€ssern vorkommen, wo sexuelle Reproduktion hĂ€ufig stattfindet. Somit zeigen diese Ergebnisse, dass fĂŒr D. galeata eine sexuelle Reproduktion weitaus hĂ€ufiger stattfindet als erwartet. Aufgrund dessen komme ich zu dem Schluss, dass die ökologische StabilitĂ€t des Habitats wahrscheinlich nicht fĂŒr die Populationsstruktur von D. galeata verantwortlich ist, sondern z.B. der Grad der sexuellen Reproduktion und möglicherweise die lokale Anpassung von klonalen Linien. Weiterhin zeigen beide Markersysteme Ă€hnliche populationsgenetische Strukturen von D. galeata in Europa auf. Das allgemeine Bild von SĂŒd nach Nord gerichteter genetischer Verarmung aufgrund von postglazialer Expansion konnte nicht komplett bestĂ€tigt werden, da sowohl mitteleuropĂ€ische wie auch nordeuropĂ€ische Populationen relativ hohe nukleĂ€re wie auch mitochondriale genetische DiversitĂ€ten aufwiesen. Aufgrund des Verteilungsmusters uniquer mitochondrialer Haplotypen und Mikrosatellitenallelen nehme ich an, dass nördliche D. galeata Populationen nicht aus sĂŒdeuropĂ€ischen Refugien kolonisiert wurden. Die in Kapitel 3 angefĂŒhrten Ergebnisse lassen weiterhin vermuten, dass die Monopolisierung durch die Nachkommen erster Immigranten im Zuge schneller lokaler Adaptation nach der Kolonisierung einen starken Einfluss auf die genetische Struktur von D. galeata hatte. Ich konnte aufzeigen, dass mehrere Faktoren Einfluss auf die genetische Struktur von D. galeata Populationen haben. Jedoch kam es zu einer regionalen Differenzierung in der QuantitĂ€t und QualitĂ€t der Umweltfaktoren auf die intra- und inter-populationsgenetische Struktur von D. galeata. Somit konnte keine Kategorie der Umweltfaktoren (Abiotik, Biomasse oder Artenvielfalt verschiedener trophischer Ebenen) fĂŒr sich als erklĂ€rende Variable der genetischen Populationsstruktur in D. galeata ermittelt werden. Dieser Promotion bildet die Grundlage fĂŒr experimentell motivierte Studien, um die hier erarbeiteten Hypothesen zu testen. Es konnte anhand von D. galeata gezeigt werden, dass eine detaillierte Aufnahme sowohl abiotischer als auch biotischer Faktoren mehrerer trophischer Ebenen notwendig ist, um die microevolutiven VorgĂ€nge innerhalb eines Habitates zu verstehen. Somit können nun basierend auf dieser empirischen Arbeit z.B. durch Life-History Experimente ĂŒberprĂŒft werden, ob bestimmte Umweltfaktoren artspezifisch wirken, oder generell fĂŒr Cladoceren eine Rolle in Bezug auf ihre Populationsstruktur in AbhĂ€ngigkeit ihres Habitattyps aufweisen
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Visualizing Perspectives for Creative Collaboration
Every day, more and more data is collected, and we are increasingly being provided with open access to it. The hope is that this will be the driving force behind a wave of innovative new businesses that are able to lead us out of our current financial problems and give rise to a generation of better informed, active consumers who will engage with the kind of changes necessary to reduce global warming and prevent a pensions crisis. However it is not enough to simply release this data, people must also be given the tools to understand and engage with it creatively. The research presented here draws together current approaches from data visualization, creativity research and human-computer interaction to provide a framework in which personal data stories can be used to present a range of perspectives and support collaboration between people with different experiences and varying levels of domain expertise
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Narrative Visualization: Sharing Insights into Complex Data
This paper is a reflection on the emerging genre of narrative visualization, a creative response to the need to share complex data engagingly with the public. In it, we explain how narrative visualization offers authors the opportunity to communicate more effectively with their audience by reproducing and sharing an experience of insight similar to their own. To do so, we propose a two part model, derived from previous literature, in which insight is understood as both an experience and also the product of that experience. We then discuss how the design of narrative visualization should be informed by attempts elsewhere to track the provenance of insights and share them in a collaborative setting. Finally, we present a future direction for research that includes using EEG technology to record neurological patterns during episodes of insight experience as the basis for evaluation
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