View allAll Photos Tagged Visualisation-----
form: one year in temperature information visualisation/representation, lasercut.
width/height: the height is the temperature, and each row is one week in temperature.
based on one of the data-forms here: www.flickr.com/photos/miska_too/sets/72157624079587460/
period: the time period covered is from may 2009 -> may 2010. thus the dip in the middle is dear ol' winter.
min/max: -25°C -> +30°C
(yes, I know unit markers would have been useful...;)
material: acrylic
kind support for this project is from the Aalto Media Factory
EEG Visualising Pendant field trials: Spacedog & Professor Elemental performing at CINECITY: Sounds of the Future, at the Komedia, Brighton.
View original size for detail.
update: the complete version can be found at
Okay, once again: 2 maps next to each other showing the same city centre but with different landmarks.
Notations 21 by Theresa Sauer, from Mark Batty Publisher. I was really excited to get this in the mail, I'd seen a few blog posts and it looked great. I'm lucky enough to have a couple of issues of Source Magazine (pics here bit.ly/pREha6 and here bit.ly/p9O1l1 ) which first sparked an ...... Read more From: PaperPosts
Notations 21 by Theresa Sauer, from Mark Batty Publisher. I was really excited to get this in the mail, I'd seen a few blog posts and it looked great. I'm lucky enough to have a couple of issues of Source Magazine (pics here bit.ly/pREha6 and here bit.ly/p9O1l1 ) which first sparked an ...... Read more From: PaperPosts
Alistair will give an overview of the techniques and technologies for visualising graph data, and explain where these work well for different types of problem. Graph databases help you to express the connections in your data. Simply by visualising those connections, you have a simple analysis tool, and a compelling user interface.
See the skillscast (film/code/slides) at skillsmatter.com/skillscasts/5095-seeing-patterns-in-your...
All the talks from TEDGlobal>Geneva at one glance, visualised (snapshot taken by my Narrative Clip).
Photoshop visualisation of Dulux colour schemes for a residential exterior repaint project. I captured the photograph with my Nikon D3100 DSLR camera and post processed the imagery with Adobe Photoshop CS6. As you can see with the original image there was a lot of tidying up of the house's substrates before new colour schemes could be applied. The paint contractor is a New Zealand Master Painter.
Notations 21 by Theresa Sauer, from Mark Batty Publisher. I was really excited to get this in the mail, I'd seen a few blog posts and it looked great. I'm lucky enough to have a couple of issues of Source Magazine (pics here bit.ly/pREha6 and here bit.ly/p9O1l1 ) which first sparked an ...... Read more From: PaperPosts
Visualisation of my flickr page generated by www.aharef.info/static/htmlgraph/ today, 05/12/08
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags
3D Architectural Visualization Illustration, creating 3d animations flythroughs and renders. Award winning interactive 3d graphics.
Perhaps my favourite talk of the whole conference, simply because Bruno Sobral made such a strong case for the positive impact he witnessed when they involved HCI (or UX design) experts in their project
3D Visualisation Studio specialising in photorealsitic 3D visualisation for products, Interactive product viewers and creative CG imagery.
Having found that the ATtiny85 didn't have enough memory to hold my brainwave visualisations code, I put together a little Shrimp circuit to hook up the LED matrix and Bluetooth dongle. Attention data levels is visualised as red LEDs and meditation data levels as green LEDs.
Using Interactive 3D Visualisations for Education on the Pathophysiology of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a neuropsychiatric disorder affecting 2-3% of people. OCD can impact those living with the disorder enormously, and it is thus crucial that they receive the best possible treatment. Improving understanding of the pathophysiology of neuropsychiatric disorders among medical practitioners could lead to better treatment. However, many medical students report a lack of knowledge in cases involving the nervous system. While research has shown that the use of interactive 3D models can improve education, the use of such models to educate about OCD has not been assessed.
Standardised software engineering methods were used to design an interactive application for Android devices. This application showed low-fidelity models of the neural circuitry involved in OCD alongside high quality information from the scientific literature. Models were produced using cutting-edge modelling tools and implemented using the Unity game engine. A pilot assessment of the application involving five postgraduate life science students suggested outstanding usability outcomes. A pre-test vs. post-test also suggested understanding of OCD improved after using the app, filling a longstanding gap in the literature and suggesting neuropsychiatric education can be improved by using interactive 3D visualisations.
Some old-school data art for the forthcoming Art Machine show at the ANU School of Art. No Meta visualises an xml source character by character; patterns reveal the recurring XML tags as well as their contents.
Having found that the ATtiny85 didn't have enough memory to hold my brainwave visualisations code, I put together a little Shrimp circuit to hook up the LED matrix and Bluetooth dongle. Attention data levels is visualised as red LEDs and meditation data levels as green LEDs.
Launch of the Last.fm Xbox360 app, quite an increase in traffic.
The original peak was the limited beta release.
The report was made up of several cards, so that the data can be cross- examined. This is a major problem with reports in a
booklet format. The report also includes a poster, showing all the information in the report cards in a singular data visualisation.
The report cards are layered with different card and die cut to create a tactile aspect, helping the reader absorb the information. The more categories and information on each category, the thicker the report card.