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Área de risco / -Santana, Elke Pereira Coelho 26 September 2014 (has links)
Área de risco é um conjunto de quinze proposições poéticas que apresenta um estudo sobre a expressão das oposições sensórias geradas na acumulação e/ou repetição de objetos de uso cotidiano. Tendo as ambivalências sensórias entre os corpos dos objetos como foco de pesquisa, o trabalho estabelece relações entre os conceitos de extensão e intensidade, matérias e qualidade. A investigação inclui ainda temas como o da coleção, da trivialidade, da uniformidade, da heterogeneidade, da regularidade e da artesania, A criação de campos sensórios instaura zonas de vizinhança entre seres de natureza diversa, capazes de dissolver as formas cristalizadas e de recriar, por toda parte, uma visão inventora de blocos de sensação. / Risk area is an ensemble of fifteen poetic propositions that present a study on the expression of sensory oppositions created by the accumulation and/or repetition of eveyday objects. Focusing on the sensory ambivalences between the bodies of the objects, the work estabilishes relationships between the concepts of extension and intensity, and matter and quality. The research also includes topics such as collection, trivia, consistency, heterogeneity, regularity and artisanship, The creation if sensory fields introduces zones of proximity between beings of different natures, capable of dissolving the crystalized forms and recreating, everywhere, a vision designing sensations blocks
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Exploring And Implementing Pleasant Touch In The Interface Of Products For Design Purposes: The Case Of A Bang & / Olufsen Tv Remote ControlFennis, Tirza Johanna Maria 01 September 2012 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis proposes a design strategy for pleasant touch. Literature is reviewed on the importance of pleasant touch, existing implementations in products and design for tactility. A lack of competence is found on how to design for pleasant touch in the interface of products: functional pleasant tactility. Therefore, a design vision is created by the author as a designer, on how to design functional pleasant tactility. The envisioned design strategy is then implemented through a study where a Bang & / Olufsen TV remote control was used as an example case.
The study includes three sequential phases: exploring, designing, and evaluating functional pleasant tactility in the given context. Exploring was done through workshops where design students were asked to touch objects with various material properties. Pleasant movements were performed with the objects, and matching functions were imagined, resulting in &lsquo / actions&rsquo / . Those actions were analyzed to discover three underlying themes of inviting, mastery and logic. In the designing phase, those themes were translated into three corresponding design concepts, and worked out into prototypes. In the evaluating phase, those prototypes were tested with that target group, and the results were used to create a final design concept.
The study then concludes with a design strategy that is expected to work for the broader context of industrial design, and recommendations for further research with this strategy and different products or companies are also provided.
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Fast Fashion in the Experience Economy : Comparing online and in-store shopping experiencesAnja, Jablanović, Çakanlar, Özden Aylin, Hohls, Christiane January 2015 (has links)
Fast fashion retailers have faced a difficulty in translating in-store experiences to online experiences. Although online shopping is increasing, the in-store shopping is still very important for a superior shopping experience. Technology has had a major impact in making multichanneling retail more consistent, although there are gaps that technology can not fill. This study attempted to measure how consistent the customer experiences were online and in-store. Shopping experiences were measured with different concepts such as: flow, usability, interactivity, atmospherics and tactility. These concepts were measured separately in-store and online, in order to be compared. The purpose was to find out which concept is inconsistent so the authors could make recommendations for improvement to fast fashion retailers. The research approach was a mixed method approach and the chosen research design was cross sectional, using quantitative research to corroborate qualitative research findings. The results from a quantitative questionnaire of 263 experienced fast fashion consumers in Sweden show that the consistency varies between the concepts. The qualitative study was done at two occasions on a sample of six interviewees in each focus group, and gave a deeper understanding for why the shopping experience was or wasn't consistent. The qualitative results varied amongst the individuals and show that reasons for being inconsistent are intrusive salesmen, insufficient size measuring tools, long queues, lack of tactility and the most interesting of all: making better return and ordering policies. The future lies in making it easier to order online, in order for the consumer to be able to experience the product in real life, through staff-free fitting rooms and showrooms and such, rather than making the experience better online. The future seems to lie in solving the reverse of the start point of this study, namely translating online to in-store experiences.
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Practices of tactility remembering and performanceMurphy, Siobhan January 2008 (has links)
‘Practices of tactility, remembering and performance’ is a practice-led inquiry in which performance-making and writing are equal partners. The thesis comprises a performance folio and a dissertation. The folio comprises two performance works. / the backs of things: This 35-minute work for two dancers had a public season mid-way through the candidature (September 8th – 11th 2005). A DVD documentation is submitted with the dissertation. / here, now: This 50-minute multi-modal performance was presented for assessment during a public season of six performances (March 22nd – 25th 2007). It is a solo piece in which I perform. The work was attended by the examiners and a DVD documentation is submitted with the dissertation. / The dissertation provides a ‘narrative of a practice’ focused on tactility, remembering and performance. It elucidates what has arisen through the dual modalities of performance-making and writing. The dissertation is not an exegesis of the performance folio. Rather, it is a critical and reflective account of the practice within which the performances reside. / The arc of emergent meaning in the narrative of practice comprises three phases: Precedents; Choreographic Tactility; and Intercorporeal Remembering. In the first phase, I discuss the precursors to my subsequent practice of tactility and remembering. I detail how I sought to diminish the effects of the objectifying gaze by staging a series of interventions into the visual field of the dance. In the second phase, I articulate my use of touch, naming it a practice of choreographic tactility. I outline the connectivity of touch and suggest that it fosters an understanding of the intercorporeal nature of selfhood. I posit practices of tactility as arenas for a relational ontology. / In the third phase, I take the notion of intercorporeality thus established and show how it engenders an embodied knowledge of remembering. I define a range of heuristic devices that I established so as to craft remembering in my performance practice. Finally, I draw the discussion of tactility and remembering towards what I term an ‘aesthetics of tactility’. I describe this as a performance domain where intercorporeal remembering is privileged. This is instantiated in the poetic remembering of here, now with which the dissertation closes.
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Can you Handle this?Silcock, Sabira January 2018 (has links)
Over the course of a day we meet countless materials and objects but rarely consider these surfaces of negotiation within the everyday environment. If we consider gestures as a language, then the actions we perform and the surfaces we encounter result in conversations with our surroundings. Where body meets details inside architecture, the commonplace ritual occurs. I will discuss the importance of touch in response to my finished work in Can you Handle this? but also during the making process.
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Área de risco / -Elke Pereira Coelho Santana 26 September 2014 (has links)
Área de risco é um conjunto de quinze proposições poéticas que apresenta um estudo sobre a expressão das oposições sensórias geradas na acumulação e/ou repetição de objetos de uso cotidiano. Tendo as ambivalências sensórias entre os corpos dos objetos como foco de pesquisa, o trabalho estabelece relações entre os conceitos de extensão e intensidade, matérias e qualidade. A investigação inclui ainda temas como o da coleção, da trivialidade, da uniformidade, da heterogeneidade, da regularidade e da artesania, A criação de campos sensórios instaura zonas de vizinhança entre seres de natureza diversa, capazes de dissolver as formas cristalizadas e de recriar, por toda parte, uma visão inventora de blocos de sensação. / Risk area is an ensemble of fifteen poetic propositions that present a study on the expression of sensory oppositions created by the accumulation and/or repetition of eveyday objects. Focusing on the sensory ambivalences between the bodies of the objects, the work estabilishes relationships between the concepts of extension and intensity, and matter and quality. The research also includes topics such as collection, trivia, consistency, heterogeneity, regularity and artisanship, The creation if sensory fields introduces zones of proximity between beings of different natures, capable of dissolving the crystalized forms and recreating, everywhere, a vision designing sensations blocks
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ExperimaniaBahlner, Sofia January 2021 (has links)
I have made an investigation in how I can encourage curiosity in textiles with a specific interest in its structures. I have found that repetition is one efficient way to make a separate building element disappear into its own mass and instead be viewed as a surface. I researched how different surfaces are created by experiment with materials and techniques and looked into the big role tactility plays when curiosity in textiles are created but as well realized that a haptic experience can be reached not only with skin but through the eyes. The experiments and elaborations I made took my ideas beyond my starting point and further than I first could imagine. I explored and questioned hierarchies and values of materials by the way I used and combined them. By doing so I realized and discussed the dilemma of being positive to the idea of letting people experience my work through touching and the issue with sustainability, duration and demolishing the patterns while doing so. Through this paper I aimed to find a definition for what fiber art can be today. I didn´t find one or totally uniform answer but it seems to me that it´s a movement that stretches over diverse material fields and has an underlying power to push boundaries and traditions and break free from classifications.
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Let´s play in the forest : A tactile tale of woven textiles with a playful expression inspired by natureLundström, Hedda January 2024 (has links)
This degree work is situated in the field of textile design and positions itself specifically in tactility and jacquard weaving. The motive of this work is to connect textile design with the user in a site-specific context for an including designprocess. The aim of this study is to investigate tactility in a site-specific context with playful weaves inspired by nature. The design process had its starting point in tactile and visual patterns in nature and involved hand-drawn sketches translated into woven patterns to spark curiosity and invite to touch. Along the process the produced woven sketches were tested on an audience to understand touch in relation to user but also put into a site-specific context to understand what could be developed in the space. The result of the study is four different weaves with variety in colour and tactility positioned in different parts of the chosen context - a children’s library corner. The collection consists of one floor piece, one wall piece and two interactive, movable pieces. Designing four textiles for different touch in relation to user and a site-specific context contributes to the textile field by containing a longlasting, including designprocess.
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O gesto como imagem e a imagem como gesto: a gestualidade das mãos na comunicação / Gesture as image and image as gesture: hand gestures in communRomero, Elisabeth Leone Gandini 29 May 2009 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2009-05-29 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / The goal of this work is to investigate hand gestures in both communication and
culture. It also aims to understand the gesture as image, analyzing some hand gestures in
Image History. There are genetic and social-cultural codes interlaced in hand movements.
Consequently, there is no way not to take them into account, for hands incorporate everything
they reach for and everything that reaches for them too.
This study embraces some aspects of gesture phylogeny due to the fact that mankind
has its roots lost in time. Supported by recent etiologists researches, it confirms that no
abyss separates man from other primates, and there are only common distinctions among
species.
Free hands encompass a true body revolution as well as a revolution in man s
communication. In partnership with the brain, man faces material challenges with his technical
gestures as well as with his psychological survival gestures present in culture.
Gesture and image are mediators and both have their point of origin in the body.
Therefore, this work privileges the primary media, but it also scopes secondary media. It
shows the abundant hand gesture testimony present in cult images, art images and media
images (Belting).
The analysis of this corpus through Culture Semiotics Theory allows us to delineate
an approach into hand gesture through some of its images: in communication and culture,
ontogeny and phylogeny. Therefore the research supports itself on methodological resources
developed by Ivan Bystrina, Harry Pross, Edgar Morin, Hans Belting, Régis Debray. It also
articulates a dialogue with ideas and thoughts that come from the work of Ashley Montagu,
Boris Cyrulnik, Eibl-Eibesfeldt, among other specialists in Communication Theory, Image
Theory, Media Theory and Culture Theory / Este trabalho visa a investigar a gestualidade das mãos na comunicação e na cultura
e, entendendo o gesto como imagem, refletir sobre as imagens de alguns gestos das mãos na
História da Imagem. Nos gestos das mãos se entretecem os códigos genéticos e os
socioculturais, e não se pode desconsiderá-los, pois as mãos incorporam tudo o que alcançam
e tudo o que as alcança também.
O estudo aborda alguns aspectos da filogênese do gesto pelo fato de os hominídeos
terem raízes bem longínquas e, apoiado em recentes pesquisas de etólogos, confirma que
nenhum abismo separa o homem dos outros primatas, mas apenas distinções comuns entre
espécies.
As mãos livres ensejam uma verdadeira revolução no corpo e na comunicação humana,
e, em parceria com o cérebro, o homem enfrenta os desafios da matéria com seus
gestos técnicos e os da sobrevivência psíquica, com seus gestos culturais.
O gesto e a imagem são mediadores e têm seu ponto de origem no corpo. Assim, o
trabalho focaliza a mídia primária, mas tange também a mídia secundária, evidenciando-se o
testemunho prolixo da gestualidade das mãos presente nas imagens de culto, nas imagens da
arte e nas imagens da mídia (Belting, 2001).
A análise deste corpus pela Semiótica da Cultura nos permite delinear um percurso
da gestualidade das mãos e de algumas de suas imagens, na comunicação e na cultura, na
ontogênese e na filogênese. Para tanto, apoia-se em recursos metodológicos desenvolvidos
por Ivan Bystrina, Harry Pross, Edgar Morin, Hans Belting e Régis Debray e articula um
diálogo com as ideias de Ashley Montagu, Boris Cyrulnik e Eibl-Eibesfeldt, entre outros,
nas teorias da Comunicação, da Imagem, da Mídia e da Cultura
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« Toucher les sons » : la manipulation expérimentale des sons électroniques, de l'apprentissage à la transmission dans les pratiques improvisées contemporaines - enquête de terrain à montréal auprès de musiciens improvisateurs (2013-2016) / "touch the sounds". The experimental manipulation of electronics sounds, learning and transmission, in the contemporary improvised practices - investigation with improvisers in Montreal (2013-2016)Lavergne, Grégoire 05 July 2017 (has links)
Dans le domaine musical, l'époque contemporaine se caractérise par la dissémination de la scène, la démultiplication des genres musicaux et l’omniprésence des techniques audionumériques dans les processus de fabrication et de diffusion des enregistrements, reproductibles à l'infini par un nombre toujours croissant d'utilisateurs de matériel informatique. Nous choisissons d'extraire d'un tel contexte les pratiques improvisées d'inspiration libre usant d'une lutherie électronique. Comment les artistes parviennent-ils à se repérer dans un environnement aussi fluctuant et problématique, puis à transmettre leur savoir musical ? Pour sortir de la compilation des données temporellement circonscrites, nous tâcherons de comprendre ce qui est en train de se passer au sein des pratiques improvisées contemporaines dans une localité précise. Le cadre théorique, hérité du jazz, montrera qu'il existe au XXème siècle un lien entre l'enregistrement sonore et l'improvisation à travers trois types d'instrumentation : mécanique, analogique et numérique. À l'aide de deux exemples historiques, nous essayerons de comprendre comment un improvisateur apprend à jouer du clavier tout en étant confronté, dans le même temps, à un dispositif technique de production et de reproduction sonore. La méthode introduira ensuite l'enquête de terrain effectuée à Montréal en 2013-2014 dans l'atelier de six musiciens amateurs. Les monographies mettront en évidence les filiations et la mémoire sonore de chaque artiste, constitutives d'un imaginaire musical l'autorisant à performer le moment venu. Les pratiques improvisées étudiées ne représentent aucun genre ni aucune tradition musicale identifiable, car elles s'inspirent indifféremment des musiques expérimentales, de l'électroacoustique, de l'improvisation libre, du free jazz et du rock. En revanche, elles demeurent indissociables du contexte qui les a vu naître, celui de la musique actuelle au Québec et de la topographie montréalaise. Grâce au concept d'« audiotactilité », ces pratiques seront analysées du point de vue des usages que les artistes font des circuits électroniques, c'est-à-dire le rapport physique à la matérialité des outils et des sons produits par le biais de l'ouïe et de la fonction haptique. L'improvisation procède-t-elle d'une construction réfléchie, telle une architecture ou une ingénierie, et l'électronique influence-t-il l'élaboration du discours improvisé ? Existe-il une structure sous-jacente dans l'élaboration d'un discours improvisé utilisant des outils électroniques en adéquation avec un processus musical vivant ? Par le réemploi de morceaux préexistants et par la pratique du sampling, l'improvisation peut être pensée comme un processus hypertextuel. Ainsi, nous verrons si les techniques numériques se placent dans la continuité de l'enregistrement mécanique et analogique ou si elles constituent un élément de rupture. / In the field of music, our contemporary age is characterised by a scattered scene, an increasing number of musical genres and ubiquitous audio-digital techniques used in the process of production as well as in the broadcasting of recordings, themselves infinitely reproducible by an ever-growing number of computer-users. In the midst of this constellation we have chosen to highlight the art of free improvisation using electronic stringed-instruments. How do artists manage to find their way in such a fluctuating and problematical environment, and then convey their musical know-how? Rather than compiling data limited in time, we will attempt to understand what is being happening among contemporary improvisation in a specific context.The theoretical framework, inherited from jazz, points to a connection in the 20th century between recording and improvisation and operates on three levels: mechanical, analogue and digital. With the aid of two historical examples we try to understand how an improviser learns to play the keyboard while being at the same time confronted with a technical device of sound production and reproduction. The methodology / approach then presents a field investigation carried out in Montreal in 2013-2014 during a workshop involving six musicians. The monographs highlight the origins and sound memory of each artist which make up his musical individuality and allow him to perform when required. The improvised sessions under investigation do not represent a genre or identifiable musical tradition, as they derive indiscriminately from experimental music, electro-acoustics, free improvisation, free jazz and rock. However they cannot be dissociated from the context in which they emerged, i.e. the modern music scene in Quebec and the wider Montreal environment.Thanks to the concept of "audio-tactility", these practices are analysed focussing on how the artists use electronic circuits, i.e. what is the connexion between the material aspect of the devices and the sounds produced by listening and haptics. Does the improvisation stem from a mental construct, a building plan or engineered map and do the electronics have a bearing on the elaboration of the improvised discourse? Is there an underlying structure in the elaboration of an improvised discourse using electronic devices in combination with a live musical process? By feeding preexisting pieces through a sampler, improvisation can be thought of as a hypertext process. In this way we can observe whether digital techniques are an extension of mechanical and analogue recording techniques or whether indeed they break with them.
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