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MEDIA CONTACT: Megan
Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or fellman@northwestern.edu
April 13, 2004
Second City Display Connects Words With Images
EVANSTON, Ill. --- The Imagination Environment, a new high-tech
visual display developed by the Northwestern University Program in
Network Arts, will be on exhibit starting April 8 at The Second City
theatre, 1608 N. Wells St., in Piper’s Alley, Chicago.
The installation, which has an open-ended run, is opening at the same time as
The Second City e.t.c.’s new revue, “Show Title Deemed Indecent by
FCC.”
The Program in Network Arts is an initiative of the department of computer science
of Northwestern’s Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied
Science. Its aim is to enable the creation of a set of software agents that use
the machine and the network as a medium for artistic and cultural communication
rather than a simple computational device.
The Imagination Environment plays a piece of video media on a central screen
-- a political speech, a news broadcast or a theatrical scene -- and, using the
technology of closed captioning, the spoken words are used to search for related
images. The most popular images associated with the words in the piece are then
illustrated on the eight screens surrounding the original piece of media.
Designed and implemented by David A. Shamma, a graduate student of Northwestern’s
Intelligent Information Laboratory, The Imagination Environment exposes the connections
between ideas and the online images that it finds. Exploiting the connectivity
of the Web and the technologies of information retrieval, it opens a window to
our world that is a machine’s “imagination” of who and what
we are.
“Using images found on the Web, The Imagination Environment can amplify
emotions, expand on ideas and surprise us with connections between thought and
image that we might not be aware of,” said Shamma. “Because it is
controlling and directing the performance itself, The Imagination Environment
is not so much a piece of art as it is an artist in its own right.”
“The Imagination Environment is one of the first systems to use the Web
as a cultural object,” said Kristian J. Hammond, director of the Intelligent
Information Laboratory. “It shows us the links between a flow of ideas
and the images that they connect to online. It exposes us to the connections
that are there, connections that we ourselves created but may not ever think
of as we watch movies, the news and television.”
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