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Computational light transport using space, time, and polarizationKadambi, Achuta January 2018 (has links)
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2018. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-273). / Understanding how light travels through macroscopic scenes can transform autonomous driving, medical imaging and consumer photography. Unfortunately, this understanding is difficult to achieve: trillions of light paths are measured by millions of pixels. The framework of computational light transport was introduced to model this complex interaction between light and matter in a tractable space. In this thesis, we study new methods to invoke space, time, and polarization into a computational light transport framework. First, we study how probing the time dimension enables cameras to separate bounces from multiple light paths. Our solutions are inspired by prior work on multipath in wireless and telecommunications. We then invoke both time and space to provide the first provable bound on resolution for seeing around corners or through scattering media. Finally, we jointly invoke space, time, and polarization to propose an ultra-high quality form of 3D imaging. This thesis contributes a few analytical theories, including: (1) provable bounds on multipath separation; (2) provable bounds on seeing around corners; and (3) proof of shape reconstruction from polarimetric measurements. The thesis also contributes new applications that span: (a) micron-scale 3D cameras; (b) real-time object tracking around corners; and (c) single-shot computational relighting of images. Future applications encompass equipping self-driving cars the ability to see through fog, or enabling doctors to see deeper inside the body using light. / by Achuta Kadambi. / Ph. D.
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A framework for enhancing the sense of presence in virtual and mixed realitySra, Misha January 2018 (has links)
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2018. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-281). / The vision of virtual reality has always been to create worlds that look, sound, act, and feel real. However, researchers and developers have largely favored visual perception over other senses. This over-valuation of the visual may be traced back to a partial interpretation of the seminal work on visual perception by psychologist JJ Gibson. Oculocentrism in design overlooks the fact that Gibson's theory of perception encompasses the entire range of perceptual processes integrated with action, including kinesthesia and affordances of the environment. Starting with Gibson's ecological approach to the reality of experience, I develop a four-dimensional framework for creating immersive experiences that blend extrinsic elements, meaning elements related to the user's real world context, and intrinsic elements, i.e., those related to the device, application and content. I present a series of novel methods and techniques, demonstrated through implemented systems to show how transferring real world affordances to virtual experiences can enhance the sense of presence, while also arguing for a shift from oculocentrism to sensorimotor processes and to the experiential modalities of touch, proprioception, and kinesthesia. My work contrasts with the currently dominant design approach premised on the notion that the richness of sensory perception can be recreated with vision alone. The hybrid systems described in this thesis present techniques for integrating space, kinesthesia, touch and other sensations, social interaction, and the user's physiology into the virtual experience. / by Misha Sra. / Ph. D.
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Brain-controlled interface for the motile control of spermatozoa : a biopolitical feminist workLiu, Anne (Anne Ani) January 2017 (has links)
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2017. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 78-80). / Acknowledging and reflecting upon the cultural and scientific discourses that shape the notions the female body, this thesis presents a biopolitical feminist work in which a woman controls the motility of spermatozoa through the agency of her thoughts. The intellectual investigation of this project is threefold: i. to engineer a system that directs the movement of sperm via the signals of brain activity, 2. to communicate the project aesthetically and expressively through art and design, 3. to situate the project philosophically and pose critical cultural questions. Technologically, this project implements a brain-computer interface, where the electric signals generated by the brain are translated into a system engineered to control the movement of sperm through a phenomenon known as galvanotaxis. Philosophically, this project is situated within Michel Foucault's notion of biopolitics, and Donna Haraway's theorization of the body as a material-semiotic actor. While Foucault lays the foundation for exposing the body as a battleground for political power, the ideas of Haraway respond to the inherent gender prejudices of this landscape by disassembling the binary of sex through technology to spark a reimagining of new corporeal futures. Artistically, this thesis creates an act of female empowerment, responding to political regimes in which women are losing rights related to procreation within her own body. Investigating the body as a medium of culture, this project raises questions as to how we operate in our politically gendered landscape. Navigating the divergent connections between art and science, this work challenges the viewer to question what is possible. Whereas our biological understanding of sperm is usually deterministic (i.e., as an inherent homing device racing towards the chemical signatures of an egg) or colored by gendered cultural constructs (i.e., its semiotic use in pornography) this project seeks to invert all preconceived notions. By creating a work that is simultaneously technological, functional, and symbolically potent, it seeks to expand our notions of what it is possible, and what is possible to question. / by Anne [Ani] Liu. / S.M.
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Bikebump : collective urban design / Collective urban designSakai, Yasushi, S.M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology January 2017 (has links)
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2017. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 105-109). / Present urban planning issues require to involve the public in the urban design process, and this slow and complicated process remains the primary domain of expert planners and consultants. Although there have been many attempts to leverage new mobile tools to engage the community. These tools support the three stages of planning 1. data collection 2. analysis and visualization three solutions. Within these tools, some gather unstructured data that is hard to convert into physical interventions. Also, some applications are not designed to encourage debate and consensus building. This study will consider how a structured integrated tool will help the process of grassroots urban design. This thesis will focus on the development of a bottom-up, crowd-sourced, urban planning tool to improve the quality and safety of urban bike lanes. A mobile application will be developed to enable non-experts to actively participate in the process of real time data collection and feedback, mapping, selection of solutions, and the establishment of priorities. The system will be evaluated using both quantitative and qualitative methods, compared to present methods on bottom up interventions. / by Yasushi Sakai. / S.M.
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Unlocking the potential of neural networks in resource and data constrained environmentsGupta, Otkrist January 2018 (has links)
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2018. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 96-106). / Data driven methods based on deep neural networks (DNNs) have ushered in a new era in the field of machine learning computer vision. Conventional algorithmic approaches are being replaced by end-to-end deep learning systems that can leverage big data. Deep learning has begun revolutionizing human centric fields such as health-care and finance, finding its way into automated screening and diagnoses. At present, developing and training artificial neural network architectures requires both human expertise and labor, requiring millions of labeled data-points to train and hours of engineering effort to develop best performing architectures. In this dissertation, my goal is to make deep learning more accessible by developing algorithms for low shot learning (learning from a few examples). This work includes new semi-supervised approaches to learn from unlabeled datasets with only a fraction of labeled examples, deep learning methods to learn from generated data using simulation based techniques, and learning to optimize neural networks for smaller data sets. Specifically, this dissertation focuses on two proposed directions which will contribute towards both technical and conceptual advances in literature. -- How can we use invariant-based approaches when training from small datasets ? -- How to enable training from multiple data sources carrying very small amounts of data ? -- How to use meta-modeling approach to automatically generate high-performing DNNs ? To address these questions, this dissertation describes machine learning algorithms as follows (a) an action recognition autoencoder which learns over very small datasets; (b) an algorithm to train deep neural networks over multiple entities; (c) a meta-modeling approach to automatically generate high-performing architectures. We also provide a dataset of neural network topologies used for predicting accuracy of a deep neural network. / by Otkrist Gupta. / Ph. D.
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Journey to the East : the re(make) of Chinese animation / Remake of Chinese animationHuang, He, S.M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 115-123). Filmography: p. 124-125. / This thesis attempts to look at how Chinese animation cinema has evolved over the years and how the Chinese nation is being constructed and contested through animation filmic texts and animation filmmaking practices as sites where national and transnational cultural and economic flows converge and contend. The unraveling of the intricate relations between animation cinema and nation is intended to shed light on the understanding of contemporary cultural, social and media scapes in China. The Introduction addresses motivations and goals, critical questions, and over-riding theoretical framework and methodology. Chapter One explores the origin of the pursuit of a national animation style by investigating early Chinese animation cinema of the pre-reform period. It also serves as a backdrop against which the present discourse of revitalizing national animation cinema is being articulated. / (cont.) Chapter Two closely examines a commercial 3D feature-length animation production - Thru the Moebius Strip, as a case of "homemade" in the era of global capitalism, to look into modern nation-building both at the industry level and the filmic text level. Chapter Three closely examines another recent feature production, Little Soldier Zhang Ga, which can be read as a new type of "national" film that inherited the heritages of the socialist cinema, but aims at revolutionizing the animation cinema. The Conclusion comes back to the core question of the national and the creative, which contemporary animation cinema centers on. I try to disentangle the relations between Chinese animation filmmaking and the state discourse of national, taking into account the broader political, institutional, economic and cultural situations. / by He Huang. / S.M.
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Tools for supporting English language learning in the family contextNazare, Juliana Toni January 2016 (has links)
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2016. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 93-95). / This thesis explores how we can help parents learn English through peer-learning experiences with their children. I discuss the design and study of the learning experience facilitated by "Read Out Loud," a mobile application that supports parents who are learning English as they read storybooks with their children. The mobile application and the context of its use provide a new interface to language learning tools such as text-to-speech, word translation, and shared-reading prompts. The thesis develops a set of design and user-testing guidelines that creates affordances for parents who are learning English. It builds on an iterative design process that includes two user studies of parents using the Read Out Loud application while reading with their children. Through observation and interviews, I investigate how technologies like Read Out Loud can be designed to motivate and augment the family reading experience and how familial factors may influence a parent's use of and interaction with the technology. / by Juliana Toni Nazare. / S.M.
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Characterizing electrodermal responses during sleep in a 30-day ambulatory study / Characterizing EDR during sleep in a 30-day ambulatory studyTaylor, Sara Ann January 2016 (has links)
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2016. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 97-100). / Electrodermal activity (EDA) refers to the electrical activity measured on and under the surface of the skin and has been used to study sleep, stress, and mood. While gathering this signal was once confined to the laboratory, it can now be acquired in ambulatory studies through commercially available wearable sensors. In this thesis, we model and analyze electrodermal response (EDR) events (1-5 second peaks in the EDA signal) during sleep in an ambulatory study. In particular, we describe an EDR event detection algorithm and extract shape features from these events to discuss the difference in shape between sleep and wake. We also describe an automatic artifact detection algorithm that we use on over 100,000 hours of EDA data we have collected in the 30-day SNAPSHOT Study from 164 participants. Finally, we model the detected EDR events as a point process using a state-space generalized linear model. We identify a significant influence of recent EDR event history on current EDR event likelihood across different participants. We also use this model to analyze EDR event rates during different periods of the night. / by Sara Ann Taylor. / S.M.
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Tactical cities : negotiating violence in Karachi, PakistanYusuf, Huma January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Comparative Media Studies, 2008. / "June 2008." / Includes bibliographical references (p. 150-155). / This thesis examines the relationship between violence and urbanity. Using Karachi, Pakistan, as a case study, it asks how violent cities are imagined and experienced by their residents. The thesis draws on a variety of theoretical and epistemological frameworks from urban studies to analyze the social and historical processes of urbanization that have led to the perception of Karachi as a city of violence. It then uses the distinction that Michel de Certeau draws between strategy and tactic in his seminal work The Practice of Everyday Life to analyze how Karachiites inhabit, imagine, and invent their city in the midst of - and in spite of - ongoing urban violence. Using de Certeau's argument to contextualize ethnographic research, media analysis, and personal narrative, this thesis argues that the everyday practices of Karachiites such as remembering, driving, and blogging are 'tactics' aimed at creating representational spaces that are symbolically free of violence. Through such tactics, this thesis concludes, cities with an urban imaginary of violence nonetheless boast a vibrant city culture. / by Huma Yusuf. / S.M.
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Essence : olfactory interfaces for unconscious influence of mood and cognitive performance / Olfactory interfaces for unconscious influence of mood and cognitiveAmores Fernandez, Judith January 2016 (has links)
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and Planning, Program in Media Arts and Sciences, 2016. / Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. / Includes bibliographical references (pages 102-110). / Our sense of smell is perhaps the most pervasive of all senses, as it has the ability to evoke memories and emotions in a vivid and subtle manner. While olfactory communication is one of the most basic methods of communication, it is also one of the least understood and one of the least exploited in human computer interaction. In this thesis we describe the hidden power of scent along with the design and implementation of "Essence", a custom made olfactory wearable device and its stationary version. Essence is a necklace that can be used by any person in their daily life for the purpose of altering one's mood, as well as affecting cognitive and psychological conditions. It can influence the user's behavior through consciously perceivable as well as subliminal bursts of scent released while the person is asleep or awake. The device can be remotely controlled through a smartphone and can vary the intensity and frequency of the released scent. The system can also potentially be triggered by physiological data such as brain signals, heart rate, or galvanic skin response, etc. The types of scent that can be placed in the necklace can range from essential oils to odorless scents like hormones and pheromones. We conducted a set of preliminary studies that show an overall satisfaction, comfort and ease of use of the system. We also demonstrate the effectiveness for mood enhancing and cognitive performance during wakefulness and sleep state. / by Judith Amores Fernandez. / S.M.
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