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dc.date.accessioned2019-05-29T13:17:19Z
dc.date.available2019-05-29T13:17:19Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/120
dc.descriptionBiography: Romi Mikulinsky is a lecturer at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem. Her dissertation at the University of Toronto's English dept. was dedicated to photography, memory, and trauma in literature and film. Dr. Mikulinsky researches, writes, and lectures on the future of reading and writing as well as on the various interactions of words and images, texts, codes, and communities in the information age. Her recent research deals with religion and data inquiring into varied religious activities and their online representations. She has worked with various start-up companies and media websites, and served as the Director and Creative Director of The Shpilman Institute for Photography. Her book Digital Clutter: Topics in Digital Culture, co-written with Prof. Sheizaf Rafaeli is to be published in 2017. A MOOC (based on the book, entitled "Digital Culture /Clutter Life and Death on the Net") is sponsored and funded by the Israeli Council for Higher Education, having been selected in a nationwide competition. The Mooc will be produced in 3 languages (English, Hebrew, and Arabic) and will be available on EdX from October 2017.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleStargazing and the "Data Sublime"
dc.contributor.authorMikulinsky, Romi
dc.description.abstractThis paper explores the codependency between the explosion of information technology and human imagination, focusing specifically on stargazing and celestial imaging. Thanks to rapid technological advent in the 20th century, Astronomy, the "science of enhanced looking", has become inseparable from digital technology. Computation has not only accelerated mediated or enhanced observation, but also made celestial imaging ubiquitous. Images of astronomical bodies regularly capture our imagination as the pinnacle of science and aesthetics as relayed through NASA's and ESA's public outreach. The feeling of awe and the existential element that traditionally accompanied stargazing are now apparent in the information society's relation to data. Drawing on Julian Stallabrass' concept of the "data sublime," the resemblance between looking at the night sky and looking at data becomes more evident. Considering stargazing as a scientific and aesthetic phenomenon, powered by data science I then turn to two aspects inherent in data analysis: the historical dimension (understanding the historical narrative from the myriad of data, similar to the way we read the creation and demise of galaxies from heaps of data relating to traces they left in the universe, our readable sky) and predictive analysis. The questions I raise include: How are we to understand the temporal dimensions inherent in stargazing (f.e., its "time-travel" quality, as we look back in time at travelling light)? What opportunities do the new era of data-mining techniques, AI and machinic stargazers have in store for astronomy? How are we to conceptualize the new breed of professional astronomy data-miners and new uses of “old” and new data? What can artists and designers contribute to this new understanding?
dc.subjectdata sublime
dc.subjectstargazing
dc.subjectcomputation
dc.subjecthistory
dc.subjecttemporality
dc.subjectpredictive analysis
dc.subjectdata mining
dc.subjectdata analysis
dc.subjecttime travel
dc.subjectAI


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