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Style is a fundamental and ubiquitous aspect of the human
experience: Everyone instantly and constantly assesses people and
things according to their individual styles, academics establish
careers by researching musical, artistic, or architectural styles,
and entire industries maintain themselves by continuously creating
and marketing new styles. Yet what exactly style is and how it
works are elusive: We certainly know it when we see it, but there
is no shared and clear understanding of the diverse phenomena that
we call style.
The Structure of Style explores this issue from a computational
viewpoint, in terms of how information is represented, organized,
and transformed in the production and perception of different
styles. New computational techniques are now making it possible to
model the role of style in the creation of and response to human
artifacts-and therefore to develop software systems that directly
make use of style in useful ways.
Argamon, Burns, and Dubnov organize the research they have
collected in this book according to the three roles that
computation can play in stylistics. The first section of the book,
Production, provides conceptual foundations by describing computer
systems that create artifacts-musical pieces, texts, artworks-in
different styles. The second section, Perception, explains methods
for analyzing different styles and gleaning useful information,
viewing style as a form of communication. The final section,
Interaction, deals with reciprocal interaction between style
producers and perceivers, in areas such as interactive media,
improvised musical accompaniment, and game playing.
The Structure of Style is written for researchers and
practitioners in areas including information retrieval, computer
art and music, digital humanities, computational linguistics, and
artificial intelligence, who can all benefit from this
comprehensive overview and in-depth description of current research
in this active interdisciplinary field.
The ability to communicate cultural codes in multimedia depends on
their meaning and beauty, as perceived by different audiences
around the globe. In this book, the ongoing research on
computational modeling of visual, musical and textual contents is
described in terms of identifying and mapping their semantic
representations across different cultures. The underlying
psychology of sense-making is quantified through analysis of
aesthetics in terms of organizational and structural aspects of the
contents that influence an audience's formation of expectations for
future signals, violations of these expectations, and explanations
of their meaning. Complexity-accuracy tradeoffs in sound
representation are further used to develop new computational
methods that capture poietic and aesthetic aspects in music
communication. Experimental studies are reported that try to
characterize preferences for complexity in abstract, classical and
traditional art and music across samples of Western and Far Eastern
cultures. These experiments illustrate how aesthetics can be
computed in terms of semantic and information measures,
highlighting commonalities and uncovering differences in aesthetic
preferences across cultures and individuals.
Style is a fundamental and ubiquitous aspect of the human
experience: Everyone instantly and constantly assesses people and
things according to their individual styles, academics establish
careers by researching musical, artistic, or architectural styles,
and entire industries maintain themselves by continuously creating
and marketing new styles. Yet what exactly style is and how it
works are elusive: We certainly know it when we see it, but there
is no shared and clear understanding of the diverse phenomena that
we call style. The Structure of Style explores this issue from a
computational viewpoint, in terms of how information is
represented, organized, and transformed in the production and
perception of different styles. New computational techniques are
now making it possible to model the role of style in the creation
of and response to human artifacts-and therefore to develop
software systems that directly make use of style in useful ways.
Argamon, Burns, and Dubnov organize the research they have
collected in this book according to the three roles that
computation can play in stylistics. The first section of the book,
Production, provides conceptual foundations by describing computer
systems that create artifacts-musical pieces, texts, artworks-in
different styles. The second section, Perception, explains methods
for analyzing different styles and gleaning useful information,
viewing style as a form of communication. The final section,
Interaction, deals with reciprocal interaction between style
producers and perceivers, in areas such as interactive media,
improvised musical accompaniment, and game playing. The Structure
of Style is written for researchers and practitioners in areas
including information retrieval, computer art and music, digital
humanities, computational linguistics, and artificial intelligence,
who can all benefit from this comprehensive overview and in-depth
description of current research in this active interdisciplinary
field.
The Gospels are full of stories of Jesus sharing meals with
disciples, friends, even tax collectors and Pharisees. Whether
multiplying bread to feed a whole crowd, relaxing with his inner
circle, or telling curious elites stories about even greater
banquets, Jesus imparts wisdom as he shares the wine and grants
forgiveness as he distributes the fish. This eight-chapter resource
provides biblical insights along with thought-provoking queries
regarding our own time, such as whom should we invite to Sunday
dinner and who is left out and left behind in our culture today.
Illustrations by artist Kevin Burns complement each chapter and
invite further meditation on the Gospel story and its meaning for
our lives. Each chapter includes questions for small group
discussion or personal reflection. A guide for church leaders
offers suggestions for preaching this book as a sermon series and
incorporating food-related outreach and hospitality efforts.
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