European Science Foundation ESF-LiU Conference Images and Visualisation: Imaging Technology, Truth and Trust
17-21 September 2012 Norrköping, Sweden Chaired by: Brigitte Nerlich, University of Nottingham, UK, Director, Leverhulme Programme: Making Science Public Andrew Balmer, University of Manchester, UK Annamaria Carusi, University of Copenhagen, DK Both Leonardo da Vinci and John Constable claimed that painting is a science. This science has been explored extensively in traditional aesthetics and art history. Given recent advances in science and visual engineering, creating images for science, of science and for the translation (interpretation) of science has become at one and the same time commonplace, even easy, and even more scientific. The aim of this conference is to bring together experts from across the natural and social sciences, with curators, artists, producers and users of images based on advanced visual engineering. By exploring emerging challenges at the interface between advanced visualisation technologies, truth and trust we want to stimulate talk, interaction and collaboration between the arts, humanities and (natural, medical, engineering, computer) sciences, in a context where both science and (visual) art are increasingly converging and, at the same time, disciplinary boundaries still separate those working across them. Final Programme MONDAY 17 September 17:00 onwards: Registration at the ESF desk 19:00: Welcome Drink and Conference Exhibition: Mette Høst, Niels Bohr institute, DK Visualizations in Physics TUESDAY 18 September 8:45 - 9:00: Welcome Address by the Conference Chair Visualisation and Art 9:30 - 10:30: Martin Kemp, Oxford Unviersity, UK Leonardo da Vinci: Modes of Visualisation 10:30 - 11:00: Coffee break Session 1: Morning Presentation Session: Visualisation and Art 11:00 - 11:30: Chiara Ambrosio, UCL, UK Artistic Visualization as "Critique": Lessons from Visual History 11:30 - 12:00: Chris Robinson, University of South Carolina, US Leonardo's Yasmin list 12:00 - 13:00: Lunch 13:00 - 14:00: Kelly Krause, Nature, UK Science, Nature and Art Session 2: The Ethics of Images and Visualisation 14:00 - 14:30: Anne Beaulieu, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts, NL The Ethics of Images and Visualisation 14:30 - 14:45: Max Liljefors, Lund University, SE Scientific Imaging, Responsibility, and The Expansion of the Natural World 14:45 - 15:00: Anindita Nag, Jawaharlal Nehru University, IN Truth, Trust and the Ethics of Visual Consumption: Photojournalism in Nineteenth Century India 15:00 - 15:30: Coffee break 15:30 - 16:00: Lars Lindberg Christensen, European Southern Observatory, DE Quantifying the aesthetic appeal of outreach images 16:00 - 16:15: Carol Lynn Alpert, Museum of Science, Boston, US Truth and Transparency: The Benefits and Risks of Communicating Innovative Biological Imaging Research in a Competitive International Research Environment 16:15 - 16:30: Anne Gammelgaard Jensen, Aarhus University, DK and Victoria Wibeck, Linköping University, SE Images of climate change - a pilot study of young people's experience of ICT-based climate visualization 16:30 - 16:45: Sarah M. Schlachetzki, Zurich University of Teacher Education, CH Science as a means for art? Art as a means for science communication? Art and the public understanding of science 16:45 - 17:00: Gunnar Höst and Gustav Bohlin, Linköping University, SE When there are no eyewitnesses - visual rhetoric in pseudoscientific representations of molecular phenomena 17:00 - 18:00: Posters Session 19:00: Reception at Rådhuset WEDNESDAY 19 September 9:00 - 10:00: Maura C. Flannery, St John's University, US The herbarium: A link between science and art Session 3: Aesthetics and Realism 10:00 - 10:30: Aud Sissel Hoel, NTNU, NO Transformational Realism 10:30 - 11:00: Coffee break 11:00 - 11:20: Maria Jaoa Grade Godinho, University of Edinburgh, UK Biological art images as tools to understand science 11:20 - 11:40: Catherine Allmel-Raffin, University of Strasbourg, FR What do we call interpretation of images in art and science? 11:40 - 12:00: Anja Johansen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO Producing, looking at and presenting scientific images in the Wellcome Image Awards 12: 00 - 12:30: General discussion led by Chris Toumey, University of South Carolina, US 12:30 - 13:30: Lunch 13:30 - 14:30: Ingeborg Reichle, Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, DE Modes of Visualization: Aesthetics and Realism in Scientific Images Session 4: Images, Scale and Maps 14.30-15.00: Phil Moriarty, University of Nottingham, UK Mapping and Manipulating the Quantum World 15:00 - 15:30: Coffee break 15:30 - 15:45: Alexei Grinbaum, CEA-Saclay, FR Nanotechnogical Icons and the Transfer of Trust 15.45-16.00: Astrid Schwarz, Technical University Darmstadt, DE Strolling through nanoscapes 16:00 - 16:15: Camilla Casonato, Politecnico of Milan, IT Maps, technology and truth. From “mappa mundi” to “satellite imagery" 16:15 - 16:30: Jen Tarr, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Visualising Pain: Body Mapping and Embodied Experience 16:30 - 17:00: General discussion led by Rasmus Slaattelid, University of Oslo, Norway THURSDAY 20 September Theme of the day: Trust and Responsibility: The visual construction of science and society 9:00 - 10:00: Annamaria Carusi, University of Copenhagen, DK Session 5: Visualisations, Publics and Policy 10:00 - 10:30: Liv Hausken, University of Oslo, NO The Persuasive Power of Brain Imaging 10:30 - 11:00: Coffee break 11:00 - 11:15: Laura Cabrera University of Basel, CH Trust and Responsibility: the case of neuroimaging 11:15 - 11:30: Rita Elmkvist Nilsen, Norwegian University of Science and Technology , NO The agency of brain mapping 11:30 - 11:45: Sky Gross, Tel Aviv University, IL Making Death Visible, Making Death Knowable: Trust and Truth in the Israeli Debate over Brain-Death 11:45 - 12:00: Marc Henry, Université de Lorraine, FR Aesthetics of data visualization 12:00 - 13:00: General discussion led by Sarah de Rijcke, Leiden University, NL 13:00 - 14:00: Lunch Session 6: Afternoon Panel Discussion: Visualisation as Practice 14:00-14:15: Vincent Irael-Jost, Université de Lorraine, FR Scientific images in the light of contemporary scientific practices 14:15 - 14:30: Manuela Perrotta, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO Tell the true story: developing skilled visions in the biomedical research 14:30 - 14:45: Gitte Lindvang Samsøe, Aalborg University, DK Does technology of medical imaging co-shape ethical dilemmas? 14:45 - 15:00: Thomas Turnbull, Oxford University UK Feng shui cows: using Google Earth to explore the visualisation regress 15:30 - 16:00: Coffee break 16:00 - 16:20: Dolores and David Steinman, University of Toronto, CA Truth and Consequences of Integrating Computer Simulations and Medical Imaging 16:20 - 16:40: Fionagh Thomsom, Newcastle University UK Virtual Bodies and the Diagnostic Gaze: the predominance of the visual in the diagnostic process within telemedicine Design 16:40 - 17:00: Kathrin Friedrich, Academy of Media Arts Cologne DE ‘Against the blaze of colour’– Greyscale in Medical Imaging Session 7: Plenary Discussion on Future Directions in Visualisations Research 17:00 - 17:30: Panellists and Discussion: Martin Döring, Hamburg University, DE, Emma Frow, University of Edinburgh, UK and Andrew Balmer, University of Manchester, UK 17:30 - 18:30: Forward Look Plenary Discussion Chair - Brigitte Nerlich, University of Nottingham, UK 19:00: Conference Dinner FRIDAY 21 September Breakfast and departure http://www.esf.org/index.php?id=9115
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