The GoC was not
present at the session. It became a conversation between Threedee Shepherd and
Myna Maven. Threedee is posting this log.
Parts of that
conversation that dealt mainly with technical issues of setting up SL
preferences are not included here.
Threedee
Shepherd: Hello Myna
Myna Maven:
Hello.
(technical
material deleted here)
Myna Maven: I've
been doing some digital art the past few years. Used to do some web design.
Still do on a volunteer basis mostly.
Threedee
Shepherd: What "kind/type/genre" of digital art do you do?
Myna Maven:
Hmmmm. A couple of different kinds. Mostly a sort of hyper-realism. But that's
not all.
Myna Maven: Were
you always interested in art/graphics? Always an artist? Or was this something
that evolved via your involvement in SL?
Threedee
Shepherd: I have worked in various aspects of the neuroscience of the visual
system all my career. I got interested in how 3D graphics might be used about 5
years ago, when I moved into studying more cognitive aspects of vision.
[2009/01/06
19:59]Myna Maven: "More cognitive
aspects of vision"...y'know I wouldn't even begin to know the questions to
ask. But I'd like to hear more.
Threedee
Shepherd: How does the brain process visual information and what kinds of
constraints does that place on "seeing" as well as what special
aspects of the scene is the brain tuned to? that type of thing.
Myna Maven: As I
said, it's even difficult for me to think of questions to ask.
Myna Maven: There
are too many.
Myna Maven: And I
wouldn't know what is really relevant.
Myna Maven: For
instance "what special aspects of the scene is the brain tuned
to"...that is quite a conversation opener.
Threedee
Shepherd: Well, the real issue is, what interests you about the specific art
you make
Threedee
Shepherd: At any one time, we only actively percdeive a small part of the thing
we are looking at, that is focused on the fovea of oour retina. the brain fills
in the rest based on prior visual experience and the way it deals with borders
and patterns.
Myna Maven:
Right. I understand this.
Threedee Shepherd:
So, in a sense, what we see is not a simple representation of "what is out
there" but instead is a highly filtered "image" of what we
expect to see, based on what has been seen in the past and on the specific
filters built into the visual parts of the brain.
Myna Maven: Yes.
Do you expect to be able to learn something more about this in SL? In your
graphics work?
Threedee
Shepherd: Yes. Espoecially because SL CAN be projected in 3D with proper
equipment, and that gives a host of ways to paly.
Myna Maven: Do
you anticipate what you may learn?
Threedee
Shepherd: Well, I am no longer doing intensive "research” But I am
interested in the ways that movement, and the body overall interact with the
visual scene that is perceived.
Threedee
Shepherd: There is a whole "field" that has developed in the last 10
years around the topic of "embodied cognition" if you google that
term you can keep busy for weeks ^.^
Myna Maven: I
think I know where you're going with this. I was wondering about this while you
were typing.
Myna Maven: And I
will Google it.
Threedee
Shepherd: My company is 3DE, LLC which expands to “3D Embodiment"
Threedee
Shepherd: There is now much good evidence that visual-based learning actually
involves the "set" of the entire body that is providing context.
Threedee
Shepherd: This all relates to PaB, in terms of how we experience BEING
Myna Maven: This
is interesting.
Myna Maven: I'm
going to ask however if you could define the way in which you are using the
word "set" above?
Threedee
Shepherd: Are you familiar with any of thekinds of "bodywork"?
Myna Maven:
You'll have to tell me a little. I may be acquainted but unaware.
Threedee
Shepherd: Anything from Rolfing to Yoga and Feldenkreis and Pilates. All of
them have to do with the way we hold out muscles to achieve postures.
Myna Maven: Oh
yes. I do yoga.
Threedee
Shepherd: The postures relate to mindset and cognition, not just exercise
Myna Maven:
Indeed.
Threedee
Shepherd: So when a baby crawls, the head naturally swings left and right, and
that is part of the "muscle" basis of knowing what left and right is.
Threedee Shepherd:
muscle knowing and learning
Myna Maven: Ah.
What of dyslexia?
Threedee
Shepherd: That's different. It is a known developmental deficit of certain
parts of the temporal cortex.
Myna Maven: I was
just wondering when you were refering to a muscular basis in the knowledge of
left and right.
Threedee
Shepherd: Well, it seems that right comes to "mean" the world changes
"this way" when I turn my head right, and in this other visual way
when I turn my head left.
Threedee
Shepherd: To me an interesting thought is that while someone like you who is an
artist is doing art, you are not thinking of all this kind of stuff. Yet it is
reflected in the final product in ways that can resonate with the viewer.
Myna Maven: Hmmm.
:) You'll have to tell me what exactly I'm not thinking. I think about many
things, both directly and indirectly to do with what I'm working on.
Threedee
Shepherd: I suspect you are not paying specific atention to your muscles, to your
posture and to the way the visual parts of the brain process the world.
Myna Maven:
Normally, no. But...one does think about posture...or I do...a kind of physical
disposition in as much as how I am "set" interacting with what I'm working
on, how I am working on it.
Myna Maven:
Interacting...or should I say having an effect. There is a whole body
relationship between the artist and his or her art. Even digitally.
Threedee
Shepherd: do you choose "how I am set" overtly and consciously and
purposely?
Threedee
Shepherd: I agree totally with "There is a whole body relationship between
the artist and his or her art." that is part of what is meant by embodied
cognition.
Myna Maven: There
can be times of this, yes. Sometimes it is a matter of reflection, remembering
to reflect upon it, something inspiring one to reflect upon it.
Myna Maven: And
that can lead to a change in what one is doing at the moment.
Myna Maven: Which
is also a change in relation to the piece.
Threedee Shepherd:
That makes perfect sense to me. And I entertain the possibility that the actual
result can resonate with similar body set it brings about in the viewer.
Myna Maven: Yes.
I was reading about the Friday experiments....do you think this same resonance
with bringing about a similar body shape in the viewer can be found
with....objects? I'm putting this not very well.
Myna Maven: I'm
also thinking in terms of forms as archetype.
[2009/01/06
20:42]Threedee Shepherd: Yes, objects
bring about affordances of their potential use and our expectations related to
the object. so, something as simple as a ceramic teapot with a slightly unusual
spout will bring up different resonances than a "normal" teapot, on
the part of the viewer of it and the user of it.
Threedee
Shepherd: And yes archetype is a pattern. the brain is tuned to recognizing (or
imposing) patterns to make sense of the world.
Myna Maven: I'm
going to enjoy reflecting on all this. :)
Threedee Shepherd: :)
Myna Maven: But now I have some things here
wanting my attention and I better get going.
Myna Maven: Really, I have
enjoyed our talk.
Threedee Shepherd: I have too.
Goodnight.
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