Essays about: "emotion material design"

Found 5 essays containing the words emotion material design.

  1. 1. The development of an acoustic insulation solution using mushroom mycelium as an alternative to synthetic foams

    University essay from Jönköping University/JTH, Industridesign

    Author : Adrián Brito Guerrero de Escalante; [2023]
    Keywords : mycelium composites; design thinking; design for emotion; sustainability; acoustic insulation; fungi; mushrooms.;

    Abstract : In the past decades, humanity is facing the consequences of the irresponsible production of plastics and the expansion of industries such as industrial agriculture, Therefore, the development of new sustainable alternative materials has become increasingly popular as a science field. That is the case of mycelium composites, a biodegradable material made out of agricultural and the thread-like roots of mushrooms called mycelium. READ MORE

  2. 2. Comfort Zones : The delicate relationship between knitted surfaces and filling materials experienced through human comfort/discomfort

    University essay from Högskolan i Borås/Akademin för textil, teknik och ekonomi

    Author : Maria Antonia Wolff Metternich; [2019]
    Keywords : knit; elasticity; comfort; filling; cover; experience; emotion; form; volume; tube; rolling; body; textile design;

    Abstract : This paper describes a practice- based research project in which physical and emotional comfort and discomfort is experienced by the human body. A variety of different Comfort Zones are presented. READ MORE

  3. 3. Challenging the dual coding theory : Does Affective Information Play a Greater Role in Abstract Compared to Concrete Word Processing?

    University essay from Högskolan i Skövde/Institutionen för biovetenskap

    Author : Ingrid Almgren; [2018]
    Keywords : abstract word-processing; DCT; ERP; semantic representation; concreteness effect; imageability; recognition task; categorization; emotional valence;

    Abstract : It has long been held that concrete material has a processing advantage over abstract material, as predicted by Dual Coding Theory (Paivio,1991), although this has been challenged. For example, based on evidence for behavioural and neuroscientific studies, Kousta,, Vigliocco, Vinson, & Del Campo, (2011) proposed that emotional valance had a greater influence in the processing of abstract words, and that under some circumstances there may be no concreteness effect and might even be an abstractness effect. READ MORE

  4. 4. World of Desire

    University essay from Konstfack/Grafisk design & illustration

    Author : Benedetta Crippa; [2017]
    Keywords : materialized hope; hope; visual culture; visual democracy; visual silence; plurality; feminism; graphic design; visual communication; drawing; book; artist s book; visual belonging; decoration; ornament; un-learning; re-learning; neutrality; femininity; imagination; desire; emotion; spirituality; complexity; communication; painting; folk art; circularity; writing; visual research; animation; narrative; book making; liberation; feminist practice; feminist future; practice of liberation; typography; material culture; craft;

    Abstract : This project report offers an in-depth, detailed account of my creative process and work during my two-year Master in visual communication at Konstfack, Stockholm. My degree project is a celebration of plurality and visual democracy. READ MORE

  5. 5. A Critical Reading of the Scholarly and ICT Industry’s Construction of Ambient Intelligence for Societal Transformation of Europe

    University essay from Malmö högskola/Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS)

    Author : Simon Elias Bibri; [2012]
    Keywords : AmI; ICT; AmI vision; AmI discourse; construction; discourse analysis; power; ideology; social transformation; society; citizens; ISTAG; ICT industry; scholarly; European; social; critical; Foucault;

    Abstract : Ambient Intelligence (AmI) refers to a vision of the information society where everyday human environments will be permeated by intelligent technology: people will be surrounded and accompanied by intelligent interfaces supported by computing and wireless networking technology that is ubiquitous, embedded in virtually all kinds of everyday objects. These computationally augmented, smart environments - composed of a myriad of invisible, distributed, networked, connected, interactive, and always-on computing devices - are aware of human context; sensitive to people's needs; adaptive to, and anticipatory of, their behavior; personalized to their requirements; and responsive to their emotion and presence, thereby intelligently supporting their daily and social lives by providing limitless services in a seamless and unobtrusive way. READ MORE