View allAll Photos Tagged visualisation
A scaled model of an Advanced Gas-Cooled Nuclear Reactor Core (AGR) is currently tested on the University of Bristol Shaking Table. The rig is an octagonal array consisting of 5901 bricks and 44000 keys spanning 8 layers. Together they form an array of linked columns that simulate the fuel and control channels of the reactor core. The bricks are designed to rock relative to each other in a controlled manner due to the boundary conditions. The mobility of the core and the corresponding channel profile distortion is considered to be a key safety issue as it affects the insertion of the control rods and the safe shut-down of the reactor during a seismic event.
A 35,000 degrees of freedom, finite element model that simulates the 3-dimensional non-linear dynamic response of the rig components is used to predict the deformations in the array. Data processing and visualisation of the numerical results is challenging not only due to the vast output volume but also due to the multi-body interaction problem at hand. For a typical seismic excitation parallel to the x axis, presented is the visualisation of absolute maximum brick-to-brick separation S envelopes along x and y directions in all layers.
The pendant visualises EEG attention (red) and meditation (green) data and visualises it on this LED matrix in real time. Using a Mindwave Mobile, Bluetooth dongle and Shrimp microcontroller.
I've built this for use in excruciating social situations such at conferences, networking, bars, etc. I'm interested in extending our emotive state by displaying if we're paying attention to whom we're speaking to or if our thoughts / attention is drifting off to the canapes or our to-do list. It's a mischievous device, read more about it here rainycatz.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/eeg-data-visualising-p...
Visualisation “Extension Josef Albers Museum Quadrat, Bottrop”, for Felix Claus Dick Van Wageningen Architecten.
The pendant visualises EEG attention (red) and meditation (green) data and visualises it on this LED matrix in real time. Using a Mindwave Mobile, Bluetooth dongle and Shrimp microcontroller.
I've built this for use in excruciating social situations such at conferences, networking, bars, etc. I'm interested in extending our emotive state by displaying if we're paying attention to whom we're speaking to or if our thoughts / attention is drifting off to the canapes or our to-do list. It's a mischievous device, read more about it here rainycatz.wordpress.com/2013/05/27/eeg-data-visualising-p...
London JS: Data Visualisation at Poke London
3D Cities and Data Visualisation with WebGL presented by Robin Hawkes
Using D3.js to visualise your analytics data presented by Edd Sowden
10 things you didn't know about D3.js presented by Anna Powell-Smith
Lanyrd: lanyrd.com/2013/londonjs-25/
AnemoneStarHeart is a visualiser / amplifier of physiological data I have created which can be handheld or used an an ambient standalone device for EEG / EKG signal amplification. I sat and watched the very relaxing The Canal - two hours of 'slow TV' of a trip on a canal, with the AnemoneStarHeart lighting up the room with EEG feedback sent from a Bluetooth EEG headset I was wearing.
If you want to see a visualisation of your professional network on LinkedIn, log into the LinkedIn InMaps with your LinkedIn profile. This is the DG COMM Social Media Team's @Linda_Margaret's network.
Find out more here: inmaps.linkedinlabs.com/network
This is a still from a DECC animation showing the scale of the ambition for greenhouse gas emissions reduction in the UK as part of the country's efforts to take action on climate change.
The UK's legally binding target is to reduce the country's greenhouse gas emissions by 80% on 1990 levels by 2050, which is a reduction of over 11 tonnes per person to 2,027kg (shown here).
Here's the first version of my EEG brainwave visualising pendant which gleans attention (red) and meditation (green) data and visualises it on this LED matrix. Using a Mindwave Mobile, Bluetooth dongle and Shrimp microcontroller.
RELEASE DATE: 21st May 2019
PRESS RELEASE
Dare to Dream: New ‘Craftivism’ project
announced by Heritage Open Days
13th-22nd September 2019
This year, England’s largest festival of culture and heritage will celebrate its 25th anniversary, with a new arts commission focusing on those who have affected positive change and the power of gentle protest.
In 2019, Heritage Open Days will celebrate its anniversary with 25 Years of People Power. Against a backdrop of Brexit - a time of unprecedented social division and uncertainty - hundreds of events across the country will celebrate change-makers; those whose visions and dreams have brought positive developments to our society, both large and small.
Alongside festival walks, talks and openings, the Dare to Dream project will explore the power of positive visualisation in effecting change and finding solutions to the problems that surround us. Through a series of ‘craftivism workshops’ designed by Sarah Corbett, founder of the global Craftivist Collective, participants will have an opportunity to think about the issues that matter to them, and how to be an active part of bringing positive change, both locally and globally. The commission is the third in Heritage Open Days’ Unsung Stories strand, made possible by support from players of People’s Postcode Lottery with the aim of exploring lesser-known histories in new and innovative ways.
Participants will hand-stitch their positive visions for the future onto fabric ‘dream clouds’, share their creations on social media, and display them in meaningful locations to encourage us all to be solution-seekers and change-makers. “We’re thrilled to be working with Sarah, who embodies the gentle form of People Power that is at the heart of Heritage Open Days,” says HODs National Manager, Annabelle Thorpe.
“Throughout history, real change has come from those who have thought differently, dreamed big and believed solutions are there to be found. Dare to Dream offers a chance for everyone to think about how we can all positively shape the future, and make our dreams for a fairer, happier society become reality.”
Across the Heritage Open Days festival, Sarah will lead four free workshops, launching at
Dartington Hall in Totnes, where the concept for the NHS was established in the 1940s. Moving to Norwich, Manchester and Durham, each session will take inspiration from local dream-makers whose historic ideas helped to shape a new reality. Downloadable instruction packs will also enable organisers to run their own Dare to Dream workshops, enabling nationwide participation. After the festival, insights drawn from the workshops will create a picture of our dreams and hopes for society in the next 25 years.
"By having a vision rather than just fixating on a problem, our brains start finding ways to turn
those visions into reality” says campaigner, Sarah Corbett. “Join us and craft your creation, whilst you think deeply about what your dream for a better world will look like, and how you can be part of making it. Stitch by soothing stitch, we can help become change-makers."
Yesterday’s dreams shaped today’s reality. This September, join Heritage Open Days and the
Craftivist Collective to create individual dreams for a positive future.
- - -
For more information and photographs:
Laura Davey, Press and Communications Officer
020 3097 1977 | laura.davey@heritageopendays.org.uk
More details about Dare to Dream can be found at
www.heritageopendays.org.uk/visiting/unsung-stories/dare-...
NOTES TO EDITORS
About Heritage Open Days
• Heritage Open Days (13th-22nd September 2019) is England’s largest festival of history and
culture; in 2018, over 5,500 events welcomed more than three million visitors across the
country.
• All events are free, including access to many sites that usually charge for admission.
• Heritage Open Days is coordinated and promoted nationally by the National Trust with
support from players of People’s Postcode Lottery, and run locally by a large range of
organisations (including civic societies, heritage organisations, and local councils,
community champions and thousands of enthusiastic volunteers).
• Heritage Open Days is England’s contribution to European Heritage Days, taking place
across 50 countries. Other events in the UK are Doors Open Days in Scotland
(www.doorsopendays.org.uk); Open Doors Days in Wales
(www.cadw.wales.gov.uk/opendoors); European Heritage Open Days in Northern Ireland
(www.communities-ni.gov.uk/articles/european-heritage-open...); Open House London
• For further details, visit www.heritageopendays.org.uk, follow on Twitter
@HeritageOpenDay, or subscribe to the newsletter.
About People Power and Unsung Stories
• People Power is Heritage Open Days’ theme for 2019, celebrating the 25th anniversary of
the festival, and highlighting the ability of local communities, groups and individuals to evoke change. For more information, visit www.heritageopendays.org.uk/organising/people-
power
• The Unsung Stories programme is annual arts-based strand of Heritage Open Days,
commissioning artists to work with local organisers, bringing to life stories, and reflecting
HODs’ belief that history belongs to all of us. For more information, visit
www.heritageopendays.org.uk/visiting/unsung-stories
About the Craftivist Collective and Sarah Corbett
• Sarah Corbett is an award-winning campaigner, author of How to be a Craftivist: The Art of
Gentle Protest, and founder and Creative Director of the global Craftivist Collective. She
grew up in a low-income area of Liverpool and was born into an activist family. Her TED
talk ‘Activism Needs Introverts’ has been viewed over 1 million times.
• The Craftivist Collective is a social enterprise providing products and services to help
individuals, groups and organisations around the world learn and take part in ‘a gentle
protest’ approach to craftivism (craft + activism), and transform the way people practice
activism in more emotionally intelligent, creative and kind and effective ways.
• Previous craftivism projects have addressed mental health, living wage and climate change
amongst other issues. Their projects have helped change laws and policies, as well as hearts
and minds.
• They have worked with Save the Children, Unicef and Mind, have helped create the new
Girlguiding craftivism badge, as well as collaborating with Secret Cinema and V&A, amongst
others.
• Sarah is experienced as an interviewee for print, online, live or prerecorded audio,
television and vlogs.
• For further details, visit www.craftivist-collective.com or follow on Twitter and Instagram
@Craftivists.
About People’s Postcode Lottery
• People’s Postcode Lottery manages multiple society lotteries promoted by different
charities and good causes. People play with their chosen postcodes for a chance to win
cash prizes. A minimum of 32% from each subscription goes directly to charities and good
causes across Great Britain and internationally -- players have raised £416 million so far.
For details of the charities and good causes which are promoting and benefitting from the
lottery draws, please visit www.postcodelottery.co.uk/good-causes/draw-calendar
• It costs £10 a month to play and winning postcodes are announced every day. The
maximum amount a single ticket can win is 10% of the draw proceed. For details, please
visitwww.postcodelottery.co.uk/prizes
• New players can sign up to pay using direct debit by calling 0808 10 9 8 7 6 5. New players
who sign up online at www.postcodelottery.co.uk can pay using direct debit, debit card or
PayPal.
• Postcode Lottery Limited is regulated by the Gambling Commission under licence
numbers: 000-000829-N-102511 and 000-000829-R-102513. Registered office: Titchfield
House, 69/85 Tabernacle Street, London, EC2A 4BD
• Follow us @PostcodePress
A year of edits for California in OpenStreetMap. This image will be updated from time to time.
The growing areas of white and yellow show how the user base is growing compared with the same image prepared a month previously.
Created using OSM Mapper from ITO World Ltd
www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/index.cfm?domain=Social%20Net...
Amazing repository of social network visualisation
London JS: Data Visualisation at Poke London
3D Cities and Data Visualisation with WebGL presented by Robin Hawkes
Using D3.js to visualise your analytics data presented by Edd Sowden
10 things you didn't know about D3.js presented by Anna Powell-Smith
Lanyrd: lanyrd.com/2013/londonjs-25/
mapping the interconnectedness of the world, in scheduled air hops.
Taking London Heathrow (LHR) as the starting point, this map shows how many scheduled air flights you would need to reach each part of a country.
Used data from OpenFlights and Admin Level 1 boundaries from NaturalEarth . Rendered in QGIS. Used a python script to do the hop calculations.
The heart-shaped projection is a modified Bonne Projection with lat_0=85.
Our rendered landscape visualisation for this flooding meadow in a residential development near Southend on Sea. More information on Star Lane on our website.
A design which I worked on involved producing 3d images as well as designing the office building on the left
In this image we see Information Technology in use in the Blended Learning Unit. The visualiser used here is a document camera with a built-in light box and top lighting. Documents or objects placed on the light box are then displayed using the data projector. The teaching wall enables students to share their group work outputs.
Our rendered landscape visualisation for this flooding puddles in a residential development near Southend on Sea. More information on Star Lane on our website.