“The play's the thing”—Computer simulations and digital storytelling: A review of Hamlet on the holodeck: The future of narrative in cyberspace

1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne Buckley
2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 641-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Radford ◽  
Avril Aitken

This paper discusses pre-service teachers’ use of multi-modal tools to produce three-minute films in light of critical moments in their teaching practice. Two cases are considered; each centers on a film, a “little epic” that was produced by a future teacher who attempts to work within an anti-racist framework for social justice. Findings point to how multimodal tools are effective for engaging meaningfully with unresolved conflicts. However, in the face of trauma experienced, the future teachers’ efforts to work within a social justice framework may be pushed to the margins. This pedagogy / research sheds light on the workings of the inner landscape of becoming teachers, and highlights the dynamic of education as a psychic crisis compounded by the demands of the social.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (04) ◽  
pp. C03
Author(s):  
Nicola Bruno

Based on the stories collected in the essay La Scimmia che Vinse il Pulitzer. Personaggi, avventure e (buone) notizie dal futuro dell’informazione [The Monkey Who Won the Pulitzer. Characters, Adventures and (Good) News from the Future of Information, translator’s note] here we provide an outline of the main trends in the current digital information scenario. Beyond the much feared crisis of information, we are actually witnessing the appearance of a great number of initiatives and projects which attempt to keep last century’s journalism values alive (though with many economic contradictions). Any journalist, even in the science field, who is interested in communicating in an innovative way can rely on a set of instruments – from the timeline to live coverage, passing through fact-checking – which can change the reporter-reader relation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 77 (29) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juhriyansyah Dalle ◽  
Ariffin Abdul Mutalib ◽  
Adi Lukman Saad ◽  
Mohamad Nizam Ayub ◽  
Ainuddin Wahid Abdul Wahab ◽  
...  

This paper reports on an initiative that discovers the potentials of digital interactive books or digital storytelling in developing and inculcating interpersonal skills among children. The rationale for such initiative is to help designing technology for good deeds for the children, who are the future leaders, because they are very much engaged with technologies. Hence, this paper aims at discussing the potentials of digital story-telling in developing the interpersonal skills among children. To achieve that, first, a prototype was designed, and then let users to experience it. Data were collected through observation and interview. In the end, it was initially found that the digital interactive book is potential in inculcating interpersonal skills among children.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen Murphy-Hollies ◽  
Lisa Bortolotti

Abstract People often use personal stories to support and defend their views. But can a personal story be evidence? A story tells us that a certain event can happen and has already happened to someone, but it may not always help us understand what caused the event or predict how likely that event is to happen again in the future. Moreover, people confabulate. That is, when they tell stories about their past, they are likely to distort reality in some way. When people who lack access to what motivated past behaviour are asked why they made a choice, they tend to offer plausible considerations in support of that choice, even if those considerations could not have played a motivating role in bringing about their behaviour. When people experience impairments in autobiographical memory, they tend to fill the gaps in their own story by reconstructing significant events to match their interests, values, and conception of themselves. This means that people often offer a curated version of the events they describe. In this paper, we argue that the pervasiveness of confabulation does not rule out that personal stories can be used as evidence but invites us to reflect carefully about what they are evidence of. And this is especially important in the context of digital storytelling, because stories shared on online platforms can exert even greater influence on what people think and do.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (19) ◽  
pp. 9360-9369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erica Flapan ◽  
Adam He ◽  
Helen Wong

How knotted proteins fold has remained controversial since the identification of deeply knotted proteins nearly two decades ago. Both computational and experimental approaches have been used to investigate protein knot formation. Motivated by the computer simulations of Bölinger et al. [Bölinger D, et al. (2010) PLoS Comput Biol 6:e1000731] for the folding of the 61-knotted α-haloacid dehalogenase (DehI) protein, we introduce a topological description of knot folding that could describe pathways for the formation of all currently known protein knot types and predicts knot types that might be identified in the future. We analyze fingerprint data from crystal structures of protein knots as evidence that particular protein knots may fold according to specific pathways from our theory. Our results confirm Taylor’s twisted hairpin theory of knot folding for the 31-knotted proteins and the 41-knotted ketol-acid reductoisomerases and present alternative folding mechanisms for the 41-knotted phytochromes and the 52- and 61-knotted proteins.


Author(s):  
Hans-Jörg Schmid

This chapter concludes the book. The distinguishing features of the EC-Model are highlighted, especially those that set it apart from the functionalist usage-based mainstream. An outlook on future work identifies weaknesses of the model that must be redressed in the future and sketches some avenues for future research, e.g. by means of computer simulations. The final section returns to the questions what and where the linguistic system can be found and defines the linguistic system as a multidimensional dynamic contingency space populated by multidimensionally competing co-semiotic potentialities afforded by the interaction of speakers’ usage activities and social and cognitive processes under the influence of a wide range of forces.


Author(s):  
John Sullins

This paper uses the theory of technoscience to shed light on the current criticisms against the emerging science of Artificial Life. We see that the science of Artificial Life is criticized for the synthetic nature of its research and its over reliance on computer simulations which is seen to be contrary to the traditional goals and methods of science. However, if we break down the traditional distinctions between science and technology using the theory of technoscience, then we can begin to see that all science has a synthetic nature and reliance on technology. Artificial Life researchers are not heretical practitioners of some pseudoscience; they are just more open about their reliance on technology to help realize their theories and modeling. Understanding that science and technology are not as disparate as was once thought is an essential step in helping us create a more humane technoscience in the future.


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