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Current Selection
Scheme : Discovery Projects
Research Topic : FILM
Field of Research : Multimedia
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Film, Television and Digital Media (5)
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  • Researchers (14)
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  • Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0452307

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $28,000.00
    Summary
    Investigation into digital games and Australian female digital game culture. The project investigates new paradigms for digital games specifically oriented to young female users, aged from 16 to 25 years. This study explores female digital game culture, particularly in Australia, to create solutions that support gender equity, and will involve research into innovative design of multi-user online games. It aims to produce, test and refine online prototypes involving different gameplay scenarios, .... Investigation into digital games and Australian female digital game culture. The project investigates new paradigms for digital games specifically oriented to young female users, aged from 16 to 25 years. This study explores female digital game culture, particularly in Australia, to create solutions that support gender equity, and will involve research into innovative design of multi-user online games. It aims to produce, test and refine online prototypes involving different gameplay scenarios, as well as produce theoretical reports to be published in journals, mailing lists and conference proceedings.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0345600

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $86,337.00
    Summary
    The body-computer interface in new media art from 1984 to the present. Our understanding of computers is restricted by dominant cognitive models of the interface. This study produces an aesthetic framework for analysing new media art as a genre and traces its development through changes in the interface from the restricted keyboard/screen assemblage through multiple sensory interfaces to the emerging trend of producing the interface as dynamic relation between biology and code. It examines the d .... The body-computer interface in new media art from 1984 to the present. Our understanding of computers is restricted by dominant cognitive models of the interface. This study produces an aesthetic framework for analysing new media art as a genre and traces its development through changes in the interface from the restricted keyboard/screen assemblage through multiple sensory interfaces to the emerging trend of producing the interface as dynamic relation between biology and code. It examines the development of interfaces between the body and computers in new media art work, establishing that new media artists, from 1984 onwards, have focussed upon the sensate body as site for interfacing with, and interpenetrating, virtual media.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0988939

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $340,000.00
    Summary
    Towards a social theory of semiotic technology: Exploring PowerPoint's design and its use in higher education and corporate settings. PowerPoint has become the dominant technology for designing and delivering presentations in many important settings and skills in the use of PowerPoint have become essential for professional and academic success. This study will investigate the use of PowerPoint in higher education and corporate settings in order to discover what these skills are and how the desig .... Towards a social theory of semiotic technology: Exploring PowerPoint's design and its use in higher education and corporate settings. PowerPoint has become the dominant technology for designing and delivering presentations in many important settings and skills in the use of PowerPoint have become essential for professional and academic success. This study will investigate the use of PowerPoint in higher education and corporate settings in order to discover what these skills are and how the design of PowerPoint supports or hinders the achievement of a range of communicative purposes. The study will provide guidelines for evaluating and improving the design and use of PowerPoint and other, similar presentation software.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0346291

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $103,409.00
    Summary
    Pocket Gamelan: Tuning Musical Applications for Wireless Internet. This project proposes a new mobile electronic instrument prototype suitable for live performance of music. Recent developments in tuning theory will play an important role in the development of the prototype allowing it become a new live electronic performance medium for music. The prototype will be tested using tuning principles that have evolved in music over many centuries on every continent.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP0346691

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $164,000.00
    Summary
    Sharing Complex Systems information by challenging the orthodoxies of linear presentation. Information Technology has contributed more to working with complex systems than to communicating them. Presentation software styled on the power of the point hardly addresses the restrictions of traditional media: sequential visual information display with little possibility for the cross-reference needed to communicate a complex situation. This research will test the effectiveness of our multidimension .... Sharing Complex Systems information by challenging the orthodoxies of linear presentation. Information Technology has contributed more to working with complex systems than to communicating them. Presentation software styled on the power of the point hardly addresses the restrictions of traditional media: sequential visual information display with little possibility for the cross-reference needed to communicate a complex situation. This research will test the effectiveness of our multidimensional presentation software prototype in a range of complex system situations in order to improve the opportunities for interactive spatial media in today's work and learning environments.
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