460 research outputs found
Sektion III: Perspektiven für Digitalisierung und Internetauftritt: Vom Konzept zum Betrieb
Guten Morgen! Frisch ausgeruht starten wird in die zweite Runde. In der heutigen Sektion beginnen wir zunächst mit den Bibliotheken. Frau Christine Baron aus dem Hochschulbibliothekszentrum des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen berichtet über Portale im Bibliothekssektor bevor später Frau Kathrin Lucht-Roussel, Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin an der Universitätsbibliothek Bochum, die Teilnehmer in die Praxis einführt. In Ihrem Vortrag stellt Frau Baron zunächst die Trends im Bereich Bibliotheks-Por..
How do we share knowledge? : a comparison between narratives and drawings
Author Kathrin MaaßAbstract in englischer SpracheMasterarbeit Universität Linz 201
The Sensorium of the Drone and the Modeling of Communities
As sensorial machine-human assemblages, drones are involved with cultural affects, technological materialities, and political discourses. Hence drones are not just technical instruments; they are interconnected with discourse. This talk will trace the world-making powers of drone technology in order to address how the sensorium of the drone can work as a model for imagining communities. The military drone is often characterized as shaping communities based on exclusion. This lecture, however, focuses on the civilian drone. Although the boundaries between the war drone and the ‘good drone’ are always blurred, artistic negotiations with the civilian drone can unleash the creative and speculative potential of this surveillance technology. By disrupting the predictive and networked operations of the drone, artworks about drones can break, reuse, and recycle the drone’s community-modelling powers in the contexts of social activism, eco-criticism, and post-humanism. Examples of contemporary aesthetic drone imaginaries that are connected with planetary, pandemic, and swarm-like communities will be discussed. Kathrin Maurer (PhD; Dr. Phil.) is Professor of Humanities and Technology at the University of Southern Denmark (Odense, DK). Her research focuses on bio-machines, surveillance technology, drones, and visual culture. She is the PI of the projects ‘The Aesthetics of Bio-Machines and the Question of Life’ (The Velux Foundation, 2023–2027) and ‘Drone Imaginaries and Communities’ (Independent Research Foundation Denmark, 2020–2023) as well as the leader of the University of Southern Denmark’s Center for Culture and Technology. She is the author of the monograph The Sensorium of the Drone and Communities (MIT Press, 2023) and she co-edited the collected volumes Drone Imaginaries: The Power of Remote Vision (Manchester University Press, 2020) and Visualizing War: Emotions, Technologies, Communities (Routledge, 2018). She has a background in German Studies and has published on nineteenth-century visual culture, historical prose, and travel literature
Same but different? : Exploring workers' antecedents to employee-driven innovation
Author Ann-Kathrin Salmen, BAMasterarbeit Johannes Kepler Universität Linz 2024Arbeit nach Ablauf der Sperre auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba
Handle with Care : Implementation of the List Experiment and Crosswise Model in a Large-Scale Survey on Academic Misconduct
Acknowledgments We thank the anonymous reviewers as well as Alexander Ehlert, Isabel Raabe, and Justus Rathmann for their concise comments and constructive feedback on our work. Co-authors in alphabetical order. Study Design: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Coding and Analysis: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. First draft: Julia Jerke, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Revisions: David Johann, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Final approval of the paper: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Funding Information: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This research is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), Starting Grant “CONCISE” BSSGIO 155981 of Heiko Rauhut.Peer reviewe
Creating a Mindful World - One Place at a Time, One Mind at a Time - Kathrin Arcari (Psychology, Faculty of Arts)
mindfulnessmemory skillsgenderKlinefelter's syndrome psychological impactsKathrin Arcari is a KPU student majoring in Psychology and minoring in Counselling who has a keen interest in education abroad and human interaction. While travelling the world and promoting human rights advocacy, Kathrin has been given the opportunity to develop her research
Male faces and bodies: Evidence of a condition-dependent ornament of quality
Thornhill and Grammer (1999) have argued that certain facial and bodily features in women serve as ‘honest’ signals of their reproductive quality and that these features comprise a single condition-dependent ornament. Here we test whether the hypothesis that male faces and bodies also comprise such a sexual ornament. Photographs of faces and bodies (front and back views) of 43 males subjects were rated independently by a total of 78 female volunteers in terms of ‘attractiveness’, ‘masculinity’, and ‘dominance’. Ratings of male faces correlated significantly positively with the same ratings of their bodies. Thus, if a face was rated as being attractive, dominant and masculine, then the body was rated in the equivalent manner. Males who possess attractive, masculine, and dominant looking faces also possess attractive, masculine, and dominant looking bodies, probably because of similar patterns of underlying proximate mechanisms that affect their development
Beziehungen zwischen Literatur und Film am Beispiel des Schaffens von Kathrin Röggla
In the article I attempt to analyze Kathrin Röggla’s “cinematic style” using a theory which assumes the simulation of media-related forms in literature (e.g. Philipp Löser’s works). Her literary style is characterized by features such as film metaphor (e.g. the “dual perception” phenomenon), editing seemingly unconnected scenes, citations from TV and interview recordings, and narration inspired by film techniques such as time-lapse and slow motion. The author seems to be fascinated by Japanese anime and Harun Farocki’s film essays. David Lynch’s and Tom Tykwer’s masterpieces function as metaphors for today’s entangled reality in her work. In “tokio, rückwärtstagebuch” she depicts the culture clash phenomenon similarly to Sofia Coppola in Lost in Translation. Both Kathrin Röggla and Susan Sontag criticize the voyeuristic personality of modern man and the influence of our media-dominated culture on the means of artistic expression
- …
