The research report to Academy of Finland

May 4th, 2012 by Antti Raike

The report of VIPP regarding decision No. 123445 was accepted on December 9th, 2011.

Research Council: Research Council for Culture and Society

Call: Tutkijatohtorin projekti

Publications on Reseda.

VIPP is over, thank you collaborators and friends!

March 21st, 2011 by Antti Raike

New blog: http://blogs.aalto.fi/oopa/

 

Conferences on Visual perception and visual arts

August 27th, 2010 by Antti Raike
From visionlist mailing list (visionlist@visionscience.com)
http://visionscience.com/mailman/listinfo/visionlist
Dear colleagues,
In the week of November 23 – 26, 2010, two exciting conferences under the general umbrella of “arts and sciences” will take place at the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts (KVAB, Palace of the Academies, Brussels).
The first (Nov 23-24) is an initiative of Johan Wagemans and will be on “Visual perception and visual arts”, with contributions from experimental psycho-aesthetics, experimental psychology, vision sciences, and visual arts. Confirmed speakers include: Dorothee Augustin, Claus-Christian Carbon, James Cutting, Peter De Graef, Sharon Gershoni, Alan Gilchrist, Alumit Ishai, Michael Kubovy, Paul Locher, Ruth Loos, Pascal Mamassian, Slobodan Markovic, Chris McManus, Wendy Morris, Baingio Pinna, etc.
More information on this conference can be found on
www.gestaltrevision.be/visualperceptionandvisualarts.
In addition to our invited speakers, we would also like to invite abstracts for posters and talks relevant to the theme of this conference. Talks will be allocated between 15 and 30 minute presentations. If you would like to submit an abstract please email stephanie.poot/at/psy.kuleuven.be before September 17.
Attendance will be limited to max. 75 places each day. Lectures are free but we will ask for a minimal registration (~20 euros per day) to cover basic coffee, tea and lunch costs. To request a place email stephanie.poot/at/psy.kuleuven.be. Participants who wish to attend only one of the two days are also welcome.
The second (Nov 25-26) is an initiative of Marc De Mey to celebrate 10 years of Flemish Academic Centre (VLAC) and will be on “Vision and material: Interaction between art and science in Jan Van Eyck’s time”. The focus will be on art history but there will also be a session with a more vision-oriented focus (with contributions from Michael Kubovy, Alan Gilchrist, Jan Koenderink, and Ingrid Daubechies).
More information on this conference can be found on
www.kvab.be/vlac.aspx.
Submission of contributions is no longer possible but registration is still possible.
Sincerely,
M. Dorothee Augustin
Johan Wagemans
P.S. Please feel free to forward this email to potentially interested colleagues.
_______________________________________________
visionlist mailing list
visionlist/at/visionscience.com
http://visionscience.com/mailman/listinfo/visionlist

Guest lecture on Feb 15th 2010: How visualization improves knowledge sharing in teams

February 3rd, 2010 by Antti Raike

Visiting Professor Martin Eppler (University of St. Gallen) will give an open lecture titled

Science meets Business meets Technology (and a little Art):
How Visualization improves Knowledge Sharing in Teams

on Monday, February 15 at 16.15 – 17.30 in room C350 (Töölö Campus, Main Building).
Professor Eppler is one of the top international professors invited by Aalto University to offer a course open to all Aalto students this spring. His course “Knowledge Communication & Visualization” is lectured in January-February. All Aalto faculty and students interested in the power of visuals are WELCOME to attend the lecture and discuss knowledge communication and knowledge sharing.

More information

Leena Louhiala-Salminen (at hse dot fi)
Professor (acting), International Business Communication

VIPP symposium 2010: Seeing Red, final day 21.1.2010

December 23rd, 2009 by Antti Raike

Enoshima, the island of Benzaiten

Speakers’ presentation notes and related discussion forums can be found at:
http://lemill.net/community/groups/vipp-workshop-and-symposium-2010-seeing-red

Moderator: Suvi Kitunen

09.30-10.00 Opening by Antti Raike and Suvi Kitunen: Practical issues (wlan, webcasting etc.)

10.00-10.30 Kirsikka Vaajakallio: Designing with colours

Kirsikka will ground her presentation to her personal experiences as being a color blind person in the color coded world. Thus the presentation will highlight the “users” perspective instead of the designers’ view and try rather to promote discussion than provide academic knowledge.

10.30-11.00 Discussion: How to select the colour chart for the interface

11.00-11.30 Sonja Iltanen-Tähkävuori: Colours, aesthetics, and values

Values are connected to the visual elements of products in at least two ways: designers’ values may become visible in the products, and visual elements may have consequences that raise ethical questions. In this presentation, design of patient clothing is discussed from these perspectives.

11.30-12.00 Discussion: Colours and values

12.00-13.00 LUNCH

13.00-13.30 Akira Sano: Computer Vision (CV) and the future of imaging

Computer vision (CV) is a technology of recognition and analysis images by computers. If computer can watch and recognize images as human do, the possibility of imaging will expand dramatically. Especially in these days, Augmented Reality (AR) has a big progress. I will introduce CV and AR technology and applications, and show some applications which I made.

13.30-13.45 Discussion

13.45-14.30 Markku  Hauta-Kasari: Applications of Spectral Colour Research

In my presentation I will introduce the spectral color research at the University of Eastern Finland from the application point of view. I will show industrial applications in which the spectral color is key technology to solve the color related task. Also the research center called InFotonics Center Joensuu at the University of Eastern Finland will be introduced.

14.30-15.00 Discussion

15.00-15.30 BREAK

15.30-16.00 Lecture by Harald Arnkil: Colours in context

Colour exists only in context, but we are still able to name and conceptualize colour in our heads. How is this done and how accurately can we remember colours? Colour also seems to change constantly in juxtaposition with other colours and with changes in lighting, but we are still able to identify objects by their colour in widely varying situations. In order to fully understand colours’ relativity and constancy, we need to address human ecology and evolution.

16.00-16.30 Discussion

16.30-17.00 Conclusion by Jussi Lohijoki and Antti Raike: How to visualise the film post-production manual?

Registration: Join the LeMill group for Seeing Red

Read the paper of the final day before the fourth symposium session, please: Blue or Red? Exploring the Effect of Color on Cognitive Task Performances

Venue

VIPP symposium 2010: Seeing Red, second day 14.1.2010

December 23rd, 2009 by Antti Raike

Speakers’ presentation notes and related discussion forums can be found at:
http://lemill.net/community/groups/vipp-workshop-and-symposium-2010-seeing-red

09.30-10.00 Opening: Antti Raike

10.00-10.30 Markku Reunanen: Subcultural visual practices

The presentation deals with the visual language of the underground community known as the demoscene. Starting from the 1980s the scene has reflected the technology, society and popular culture of its time. The developments have all contributed to the audiovisual artifacts produced by the community, and here we will look into some of those factors.

10.30-11.00 Discussion:

11.00-11.30 Tommi Jantunen: On the perception of  allegedly word-like units in signed language

The talk demonstrates two experiments dealing with sign (cf. word) perception in signed language. The results of the experiments indicate that there exists a categorical difference between what the sign is argued to be in (and by) the linguistic theory and what the sign actually appears to be on the basis of perceptual experiments. Consequences of this conflict are outlined.

11.30-12.00 Discussion

12.00-13.00 LUNCH

13.00-13.30 Philip Dean: Digital photography, perception  and colour management

Long White Cloud

13.30-14.00 Discussion: Reproduction of colours

14.00-14.30 Antti Raike and Jyrki Messo:  Results of colour naming test

14.30-15.00 Discussion:

15.00-15.30 BREAK

15.30-16.00 Lauri Ahonen: Lessons of eye-tracking

The speech will present the foundation of the eye tracking. The basic physiology behind the eye movements will be introduced but focus is in the today’s eye tracking methods. Examples of the existing systems for eye tracking will also be listed

16.00-16.30 Discussion

16.30-17.00 Conclusion

Registration: Join the LeMill group for Seeing Red

Read the paper of the second day before the second symposium session, please: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Study of Users’ Perceptions of a Webpage: With a Focus on the Cognitive Styles of Chinese, Koreans and Americans

Venue

VIPP symposium 2010: Seeing Red, first day 12.1.2010

December 23rd, 2009 by Antti Raike

Speakers’ presentation notes and related discussion forums can be found at:
http://lemill.net/community/groups/vipp-workshop-and-symposium-2010-seeing-red

09.15-10.00 Opening: Antti Raike

10.00-10.30 Raija Talvio: Film production workflow and post production

How to keep the story alive through pre production, production and post production – and is this possible? The different forms the story takes before it reaches the screen.

10.30-11.00 Discussion: How to visualise film production

11.00-11.30 Anna Heiskanen: Film production manual fort the students and staff

Post production workflow has gone through rapid change and keeps on changing. Presenting up-to-date material to the students is a challenge as seems to be understanding the process to the students. So this opportunity for understanding visualizing this maze of phases is very much appriciated.

11.30-12.00 Discussion: The use of film production manual

12.00-13.00 LUNCH

13.00-13.45 Simo Vanni: Visual cortex: one for all and all for one

A single neuron in the visual cortex is sensitive to stimulation not only locally, within classical reseptive field (CRF), but also to stimulation outside the CRF. This extra-CRF sensitivity modulates neural responses, and we have proposed a hypothesis that this modulation render neural responses to distinct visual objects more independent throughout the visual system. This hypothesis connects the well known psychological and physiological principles of contextual modulation to efficient coding of sensory information, and is in line with a view that the hierarchical system of visual cortices comprise a functionally homogenous, but multidimensional network of representations, reflecting learned regularities in the visual environment.

13.45-14.15 Discussion:

14.15-14.45 Samu Mielonen: Data visualisation & colour blindness

14.45-15.00 Discussion:

15.00-15.30 BREAK

15.30-16.00 Markus Koskela: Content-Based Video Analysis

Digital video has become commonplace both in professional use and in various consumer products, and the capturing, storing, and transmitting of digital video has steadily become easier and more cost-effective. However, the current methods for the analysis and semantic representation of the video content are considerably less mature. In this talk, I will introduce the research done at Aalto University ICS Department on content-based video analysis, and present some applications such as automatic video summarization and mobile augmented reality.

16.00-16.30 Discussion

16.30-17.00 Conclusion

Registration: Join the LeMill group for Seeing Red

Read the paper of the first day before the first symposium session, please: Measuring visual clutter

Venue

VIPP workshop and symposium 2010: Seeing Red

December 11th, 2009 by Antti Raike

The Seeing Red symposium and workshop will be held on January 12th, 14th, 19th, and 21st at Aalto University School of Art and Design (former TAIK), Hämeentie 135 C, Helsinki, Finland. Researchers, doctoral students, and MA students working on thesis: Welcome!

VIPP_seeing_red2_2010 photo by Tapio Lipasti

Venue

Program

First day, January 12th, 2010, Aalto University School of Art and Design (open for all)

Second day, January 14th, 2010, Aalto University School of Art and Design (open symposium for all)

Third day, January 19th, 2010, Aalto University School of Art and Design (closed workshop for invited participants)

09.15-10.00 Opening and discussion for the program: Suvi Kitunen and Antti Raike

10.00-10.30 Michihito Mizutani: Principles of Interaction design

10.30-11.00 Tarmo Toikkanen: Agile prototyping

When creating innovative software solutions, they cannot be specified in advance. Traditional linear development models do not work, so iterative and agile methods are needed. This talk will present an R&D method that is used design and create software solutions that truly deliver what their target audience needs.

11.00-11.30 Prototyping with Rasmus Vuori, Jyrki Messo, Markku Reunanen and Tarmo Toikkanen

11.30-12.00 Prototyping continues

12.00-13.00 LUNCH

13.00-13.30 Rasmus Vuori: Narrative inertia

13.30-14.00 Discussion: Emotion colours

14.00-14.30 Prototyping continues

14.30-15.00 BREAK

15.00-15.30 Prototyping continues

15.30-16.00 Discussion & demos

16.00-16.30

16.30-17.00 Conclusion

Final day, January 21st, 2010, Aalto University School of Art and Design (open symposium for all)

Invited speakers

Raija Talvio

Anna Heiskanen

Simo Vanni

M.D. from University of Helsinki 1990, Ph.D. from University of Helsinki and Helsinki university of technology 1998. Postdoc in CerCo laboratory/CNRS in Toulouse, France 2000-2002. Director of Vision systems physiology -group at Brain research unit, Low temperature laboratory, Helsinki University of Technology from 2002 onwards. The group uses functional imaging and psychophysics to study biological visual signal processing in human brain. Docent in neurophysiology 2006, academy research fellow 2008.

Samu Mielonen

Samu Mielonen (MA, New Media) is a researcher and consultant working in the field of media and energy. He’s been teaching various courses on visualization for the past years at the University of Art & Design and enjoys his protanomalous color vision deficiency.

Markus Koskela

Markku Reunanen

Markku Reunanen is the lecturer of interactive visualization at Media Lab, University of Art and Design Helsinki. His teaching consists of themes such as 3D user interfaces, interface prototyping, dynamic visualization and software development. In addition to his educational activities he is a member of the Systems of Representation research group.
Before Mlab Markku studied software science at Tampere University of Technology and worked there in virtual reality related projects. He is a postgrad student at Helsinki University of Technolgy, where he also worked as a researcher for two years on a project dealing with immersive art. Underground demo scene research has been Markku’s pet project since 2004.

Tommi Jantunen

Dr Tommi Jantunen is a Postdoctoral Researcher and the leader of the project 3BatS financed by the Academy of Finland (2010-2012). He received his MA in General Linguistics in 2001 (University of Helsinki) and his doctoral degree in Finnish Sign Language (FinSL) in 2008 (University of Jyväskylä, JyU). He has previously worked both as a lecturer (2005-2009) and as an assistant (2004) in FinSL at the JyU, as a lecturer at the Humanities Polytechnic/Sign Language Interpreter Degree Programme (2003-2004), and as a Sign Language researcher at the Finnish Association of the Deaf (1998-2002). His research areas cover the history and change of FinSL, FinSL lexicon, and FinSL grammar (phonology, morphology, syntax). In the current project he investigates critically certain well-established assumptions concerning signed language and its linguistic research.

Philip Dean

Lauri Ahonen

Lauri Ahonen received his M.Sc. in Technology in the spring of 2009. His current field of study is cognitive fatigue and its relation to human physiology. Lauri is interested in the research of the human senses, their neurology and relation to cognition. He also finds interaction with information systems and usability issues fascinating. A collective term for his interests is neuroergonomics. Lauri’s work focuses, due to technical background, designing research paradigms. He is currently employed as a research engineer at the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health (Työterveyslaitos). He is responsible for the technical engineering in research paradigms. Furthermore, he will participate as a student in a teaching programme for a degree in innovation management, when the programme starts in the spring of 2010. Lauri’s future plans are to pursue a Ph.D. degree abroad, possibly in an industrial project.

Michihito Mizutani

Tarmo Toikkanen

Tarmo Toikkanen is a psychologist, a software architect, a scrum master, an entrepreneur, an author, and a researcher. Tarmo works as a researcher in the Learning Environments research group at the Media Lab of the Aalto university and is working on his doctoral thesis at the University of Helsinki. His research tasks include both agile software R&D project management, as well as social network analysis of collaborative learning scenarios. He also studies how social media tools and services could be utilized in educational settings. His publications range from software artefacts to conference presentations, from peer reviewed academic articles to popular magazine articles and books.

Rasmus Vuori

Kirsikka Vaajakallio

Kirsikka Vaajakallio has MA in industrial design, and she graduated from the University of Art and Design Helsinki 2006 after working there as research assistant during 2005-2006 in user centered design project named Active@work. She started her doctoral studies in 2007 in the Design Connections Doctoral School in the School of Design. In her research she investigates creative team work, particularly how game-like approaches like design games provide a framework for collaboration during development and change processes. The study emphasizes design oriented way of gaining user insights and finding design opportunities, i.e. exploring how visual and tangible design representation can be harnessed for sharing and producing knowledge within a group of people. She visited Danmarks Design Skole, in Copenhagen during the autumn 2007. Currently She works with service design related project called Extreme Design: “Developing Extreme Service Design Methods”. The project is conducted in collaboration with TKK (HIIT and Sober-IT) and four companies.

Sonja Iltanen-Tähkävuori

Sonja Iltanen-Tähkävuori (DA) is a fashion designer and a researcher. She has studied practical and ethical issues related to industrial fashion design and ageing since 1999. Currently she is working with a post-doctoral research project on clothing, dementia and home care.

Akira Sano

Akira Sano is a visiting researcher from Japan. His research area is “Augmented Reality” and “Physical Computing”. He develops new
applications to expand the ways of communication on Internet. He was born in 1973 Osaka, Japan. After studying at graduate school of Human Sciences Osaka University, he worked for commercial film production in Tokyo as a production manager. In 1997, he established a digital contents division and worked as a technical director. While his working, the contents which his team made got many international advertisement prizes. In 2001, he worked for Kyushu Sangyo University as a associate professor.

Markku Hauta-Kasari

Markku Hauta-Kasari was born in 1970 in Sonkajarvi, Finland. He received his MSc in computer science from the University of Kuopio, Finland, in 1994 and his PhD in information processing from the Lappeenranta University of Technology, Finland, in 1999. Since 1999 he has been working in research and teaching positions at the Department of Computer Science, University of Joensuu, Finland. In 2002 he was one year as Acting Professor. From 1996 to 1998 he was a visiting researcher at the Optical Sensing Laboratory, Saitama University, Japan. In 2002 he was 2 months as a visiting researcher at Professor Miyake laboratory in Chiba University, Japan, and in 2007 one month as a visiting Professor at the National Museum of Japanese History, Japan. He is a Docent in spectral imaging and spectral image analysis at the University of Joensuu. Since 2003, he has been the Director of InFotonics Center Joensuu research center at the University of Joensuu. His research interest include spectral color research, pattern recognition and computer vision. He is a member of the Optical Society of Japan, and Pattern Recognition Society of Finland. He is the committee member of the International Committee for Imaging Science, ICIS, representing Finland, since 2007. He is a past chairman of the Pattern Recognition Society of Finland. Since 2008, he is the chairman of the CIE Technical Committee TC8-07 “Multispectral imaging”.

Harald Arnkil

Harald Arnkil is an artist, colorist and art educator. He is a full-time faculty member in the School of Visual Culture at the University of Art and Design Helsinki, holding a permanent tenure as lecturer in color studies since 1990.
He graduated with a degree in painting from the Finnish Academy of Fine Art in 1979 and has held several one-man exhibitions and taken part in numerous group shows in Finland and abroad. Arnkil has lectured and published articles on color and art in Finland and abroad, and has recently published “Värit havaintojen maailmassa”, a book on color for artists, designers and architects. Harald Arnkil is also the founder and president of the Finnish Color Association and is a member of the Stockholm-based SYN-TES -research group on colour, light and space.

Jussi Lohijoki

Moderators

Suvi Kitunen

Suvi Kitunen is a web designer and lecturer. Kitunen started to design web sites at the age of 15. In 2004 she moved to study in the UK. While in the country, she worked as a freelance web and graphic designer. After three years she scored a first class degree in media production and moved back to Finland to do MA degree at Media Lab, the University of Art and Design Helsinki. During her studies she specialised in user-centred design. Kitunen was part of a Finnish team to win a 24HRS participatory design competition in Oslo. Her MA theses focused on designing web interfaces for Deaf users. Currently, Kitunen is working as a digital media teacher at the University of Applied Sciences Kymenlaakso (Kymenlaakson Ammattikorkeakoulu) and giving lectures on web design for users with special needs.

Antti Raike

Webcast

Diana de Sousa

Heikki Tuononen

About the symposium and workshop

Three symposium days are open for all, but registration and a small preliminary work will be required. The workshop on Tuesday, January 19th is closed. We will organise a video stream for all four days and the presentations will be published on SlideShare. Participants and presenters are encouraged to join LeMill for discussions. The name of our LeMill group is “VIPP workshop and symposium 2010: Seeing Red“. Make a LeMill account before joining the group, please.

Speakers’ presentation notes and related discussion forums

http://lemill.net/community/groups/vipp-workshop-and-symposium-2010-seeing-red

Registration

Registration for Jan 12th, 14th, and 21st, 2010: Join the LeMill group for Seeing Red

Lunch

VIPP in December 2009

December 7th, 2009 by Antti Raike

I had to cancel – or rather postpone – this year’s symposium due to eye-tracking tests that took place from Oct 15th to Dec 2nd 2009. Eye-tracking tests were made by Tobii equipment of TKK at Konemiehentie 2, Otaniemi. Total of 67 participants with 15 different native languages were tested with the set of 35 pictures that included the six proposals made by 6 designers. After the eye-tracking test each participant made the colour naming test. Thus we are able to analyse both the data of eye-tracking tests and the data of the colour naming test in the next workshop in January 2010. The January workshop is also the third VIPP symposium.

Experiments in October – December 2009

Participants

The participants were from Asia, Europe, and Latin America between the ages of 22 and 63, with 31 males and 36 females using total of 15 languages as mother tongues. All of the participants had experience browsing webpages, and all were living in Finland during the test. The participants had following 14 languages as native languages:

  • Finnish
  • English
  • Portuguese
  • Hindi
  • Turkish
  • Japan
  • Tamil
  • Finnish Sign Language
  • Chinese
  • Spanish
  • German
  • Malayalam
  • French
  • Russia

The youngest participant was 22 years and the oldest was 63 years. After the eye-tracking tests 7 participants made the colour naming test at Media Lab, TAIK. The “new” languages in these test were

  • Korean
  • Swedish spoken in Finland
  • Serbian

Thus the total set of languages in colour naming test is 17 languages.

Eye tracking in colour testing

Eye-tracking movement was measured based on eye-tracking metrics using Tobii equipment. The main measurements used in eye-tracking research are “fixation” and “saccades.” These are defined by Dong & Lee (2008) as follows:

  • Fixation: The focusing of the eye on an object is termed fixation. A fixation defined by the eye position stabilizes within some threshold of dispersion (typically ~2°) over a duration lasting from 66 to 416 milliseconds (218 ms on average).
  • Saccade: A rapid eye movement from one location to another is termed a saccade. It is the movement occurring between fixations, typically lasting for 20 to 35 milliseconds (Poole & Ball, 2005). During a saccade, no information is obtained.

Several other eye-tracking metrics are also commonly used:

  • Scan path: A spatial arrangement of a sequence of fixations. It usually consists of a sequence of fixations and interconnecting saccades.
  • Area of Interest (AOI): Area of a display or visual environment that is of interest to the researcher or design team and is thus designed by them (not by the participant).
  • Gaze duration: Cumulative duration and average spatial location of a series of consecutive fixations within an area of interest. Gaze duration typically includes several fixations and may include a relatively small amount of time for the short saccades between these fixations.

Modern eye-tracking equipment makes it possible to track and analyse the process of visual perception that is an essential part of a user’s interaction with an interface. Research in eye movement has flourished with major advances in both eye-tracking technology and the psychological theories that link eye-tracking data and cognitive processes. Eye tracking provides insight into a user’s cognitive strategies and allows identifying unconscious patterns. Cowen, Ball, and Delin (2002) claimed that eye movement data can augment data obtained through user testing by providing more specific information about a user’s cognitive processes. Most of the work in this area is focused on research in psychology and physiology and explores how the human eye operates and what this can reveal about perceptual and cognitive processes. Salvucci (1999) has stated that eye movements provide a rich and informative window into a person’s thoughts and intentions.

Procedure

Participants were given brief instructions after they arrived in the experiment room. They were told that the purpose of the test was to clarify how people using different languages might use different search strategies while seeking film post production information. They were informed that an eye-tracking device would be used in the test and that it would not directly come into contact with them. In the experiment, their eye movements would be recorded, and the recorded results would be used only for the research and not for evaluating users. They were encouraged to relax during the test.

After being seated in front of the monitor and eye-tracking device, participants were informed of the details of the experiment, including how the eye-tracking device would work and what they would be asked to do during the experiment. After instruction the participants’ eyes were calibrated in relation to the screen of the monitor on which the photograph was to be presented in the end of test set of pictures. After calibration several pictures were shown to participants, and they were asked to freely look at the each picture to find film production related pages. The task was to determine how people actually view a webpage when specifically searching film post production information and thus to reveal their natural viewing pattern. The colour naming test was made after the participants’ eye movements were recorded.

Design for All workshop 2009

January 15th, 2009 by Antti Raike

DfA workshop 2009, the PROGRAMME. Lectures are open for all!

Wednesday 21.1.2009

10-11 Workshop in practice: introductions of the participants, agreements for the outcomes etc.
11-12 Introduction: Collaboration in DfA and projects improving accessibility (Antti)
12-12.30 Discussion

12.30-13.30 Lunch

13.30-15.30 Päivi Rainò: SYKE-PULSE – a different project in Dfa. Visualizing rhythm and music for the deaf and hard of hearing.

13.30-15.00 Presentation of the participant: Suvi Kitunen’s pre-assignments exposed.

Programme ends, but participants should continue working with own texts and an assignment given by Antti

Thursday 22.1.2009

10-12 Marketta Kyttä: Theory of affordances and softGIS methodology in person-environment research
12-12.30 Discussion

12.30-13.30 Lunch

13.30-17.00 Presentations of the participants, pre-assignment exposed:
– Joanna Saad-sulonen
– Tarja Toikka
– Hans Põldoja
– Kati Heljakka
– Batsirai Chivhanga
– Juhani Tenhunen

Friday 23.1.2009

10-12 Sonja Iltanen: Aesthetics in DfA and special needs design
12-12.30 Discussion

12.30-13.30 Lunch

13.30-15.00 Discussion and conclusions

Welcome to listen (and watch) the lectures!