Projects

by Golan Levin @ 3:05 pm 10 January 2011

Assignments
There will be four major projects this semester: three guided explorations and one self-directed capstone project. Each of these assignments will have multiple intermediate deadlines, e.g. for presentations of your background research and prototype sketches. Each of the three explorations will unfold over 2½ weeks, while the capstone project is allocated approximately 7 weeks. The projects, briefly described, are:

  • 1. Gauntlet. Due Wednesday January 12.
    Demonstrate your interest in the course, and your ability to learn fast and deliver.
  • 2. Information Visualization. Due Wednesday January 26.
    A project concerned with the comprehensive process of visualizing real-world information. You will identify some information of interest and develop software and other procedures to acquire, parse, filter, mine, represent, refine, and interact with your data — while keeping in mind essential questions about what information is worth visualizing, what makes it worth visualizing, and how your visualization functions to produce new knowledge and make an impact in culture.
  • 3. Interaction & Augmentation. Due Monday February 14.
    A project concerned with augmenting human action and/or perception, this is an exploration of interactive feedback in the context of high-bandwidth, continuous and real-time human signals — whether gesture, speech, body movement, or any other measurable property or behavior. You will develop, e.g. a gesture processor, a drawing program, a transformative mirror, an audiovisual instrument, or some other system which allows a participant to experience themselves and the world in a new way.
  • 4. Dynamic Simulation. Due Wednesday March 2.
    Software makes possible the simulation, rather than mere representation, of the principles which animate the natural world around us. In this project you will model an organic system by developing an interplay of simulated forces: simulated life, an organic growth simulation, a virtual terrain developed from simulated physics. We will consider these, where appropriate, in the context of 3D output technologies such as laser-cutters and stereolithography.
  • 5. Self-Directed Capstone Project. Due April 19 & 21.
    The remainder of the semester (6-7 weeks) provides time for you to pursue your own research project. It is not too soon to start thinking about what that investigation might be.

In addition to the four principal projects, you will also be expected to:

  • Write weekly blog entries, calledLooking Outwards Exercises”.
    For these exercises, you are asked to identify an interesting project, not previously discussed in class, and write a paragraph (~100-150 words) about why you find it interesting, what particular strengths it has, what unexplored opportunities it suggests, and (if appropriate) how it relates or compares to projects we may have seen in class.
  • Contribute helpful comments on the course web site, whether on the projects of your peers, or on the entries written by the professor.

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