Journal articles on the topic 'Spatialized'

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1

Bruggmann, André, Sara I. Fabrikant, and Ross S. Purves. "How Can Geographic Information in Text Documents be Visualized to Support Information Exploration in the Humanities?" International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing 14, no. 1-2 (March 2020): 98–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/ijhac.2020.0247.

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Finding and selecting interesting and relevant information in large online digital text archives can be challenging. We tackle this information access problem from a geographic information science perspective using a case study exploring a semi-structured historical encyclopedia. We propose a three-pronged approach for this, based around (1) automatic retrieval of spatio-temporal and thematic information from digital text documents; (2) transformation of the extracted information to spatialize and visualize spatio-temporal and thematic structures; and (3) integration of the spatialized displays in an interactive web interface driven by a user-centered design and evaluation approach. We implemented an interactive spatialized network display to allow identification of spatio-temporal relationships hidden in the text archive, complemented by an interactive self-organizing map display to visualize thematic relationships in these text documents. We evaluated the utility and usability of the developed interface in a user study with digital humanities scholars. Empirical results show that the developed interface supports target users in the humanities uncovering latent spatio-temporal and thematic relationships and generated new insights through the spatialized text collection. Adopting this approach, we illustrate one avenue to addressing the information access problem in the digital humanities from a GIScience perspective.
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Verron, Charles, Mitsuko Aramaki, Richard Kronland‐Martinet, and Grégory Pallone. "Spatialized additive synthesis." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 123, no. 5 (May 2008): 3516. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2934430.

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3

Kobayashi, Maori, Kanako Ueno, and Shiro Ise. "The Effects of Spatialized Sounds on the Sense of Presence in Auditory Virtual Environments: A Psychological and Physiological Study." Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments 24, no. 2 (May 1, 2015): 163–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/pres_a_00226.

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Although many studies have indicated that spatialized sounds increase the subjective sense of presence in virtual environments, few studies have examined the effects of sounds objectively. In this study, we examined whether three-dimensional reproduced sounds increase the sense of presence in auditory virtual environments by using physiological and psychological measures. We presented the sounds of people approaching the listener through a three-dimensional reproduction system using 96 loudspeakers. There were two spatial sound conditions, spatialized and non-spatialized, which had different spatial accuracy of the reproduction. The experimental results showed that presence ratings for spatialized sounds were greater than for non-spatialized sounds. Further, the results of the physiological measures showed that the sympathetic nervous system was activated to a greater extent by the spatialized sounds compared with the non-spatialized sounds, and the responses to the three-dimensional reproduced sounds were similar to those that occur during intrusions into personal space in the real world. Additionally, a correlation was found between the psychological and the physiological responses in the spatialized sound condition. These results suggest that the physiological measures correlate to the perceived presence in acoustic environments.
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Grim, Patrick, Stephanie Wardach, and Vincent Beltrani. "Location, location, location." Interaction Studies 7, no. 1 (March 23, 2006): 43–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/is.7.1.04gri.

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Most current modeling for evolution of communication still underplays or ignores the role of local action in spatialized environments: the fact that it is immediate neighbors with which one tends to communicate, and from whom one learns strategies or conventions of communication. Only now are the lessons of spatialization being learned in a related field: game-theoretic models for cooperation. In work on altruism, on the other hand, the role of spatial organization has long been recognized under the term ‘viscosity’. Here we offer some simple simulations that dramatize the importance of spatialization for studies of both cooperation and communication, in each case contrasting (a) a model dynamics in which strategy change proceeds globally, and (b) a spatialized model dynamics in which interaction and strategy change both operate purely locally. Local action in a spatialized model clearly favors the emergence of cooperation. In the case of communication, spatialized models allow communication to arise and flourish where the global dynamics more typical in the literature make it impossible. Simulations make a dramatic case for spatialized modeling, but analysis proves difficult. In a final section we outline some of the surprises of spatial dynamics but also some of the complexity facing attempts at deeper analysis.
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5

Lett, Jacob. "Divine Roominess: Spatial and Music Analogies in Hans Urs von Balthasar and Robert Jenson." Pro Ecclesia: A Journal of Catholic and Evangelical Theology 28, no. 3 (May 7, 2019): 267–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1063851219846681.

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Hans Urs von Balthasar and Robert Jenson both spatialize God by depicting the triune life as “roomy”. Theologians have employed spatial analogies readily since the inception of the “trinitarian revival” of the 20th century. In recent days, however, theologians have begun critiquing divine spatial imagery. In particular, the spatialized grammar of Balthasar’s trinitarian theology has attracted criticism. In this article, I review Balthasar’s divine spatial analogies and show how “bodily” readings of them have provoked criticism. I then repair Balthasar by applying Jenson’s musical rendition of “divine roominess” to Balthasar’s spatial analogies, suggesting that musical conceptions of space resolve some of the concerns theologians raise with Balthasar’s trinitarian theology in particular and spatial analogies in general.
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Barro, Diakarya, Moumouni Diallo, and Remi Guillaume Bagré. "Spatial Tail Dependence and Survival Stability in a Class of Archimedean Copulas." International Journal of Mathematics and Mathematical Sciences 2016 (2016): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/8927248.

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This paper investigates properties of extensions of tail dependence of Archimax copulas to high dimensional analysis in a spatialized framework. Specifically, we propose a characterization of bivariate margins of spatial Archimax processes while spatial multivariate upper and lower tail dependence coefficients are modeled, respectively, for Archimedean copulas and Archimax ones. A property of stability is given using convex transformations of survival copulas in a spatialized Archimedean family.
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Cunio, Rachel J., David Dommett, and Joseph Houpt. "Spatial Auditory Cueing for a Dynamic Three-Dimensional Virtual Reality Visual Search Task." Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 63, no. 1 (November 2019): 1766–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1071181319631045.

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Maintaining spatial awareness is a primary concern for operators, but relying only on visual displays can cause visual system overload and lead to performance decrements. Our study examined the benefits of providing spatialized auditory cues for maintaining visual awareness as a method of combating visual system overload. We examined visual search performance of seven participants in an immersive, dynamic (moving), three-dimensional, virtual reality environment both with no cues, non-masked, spatialized auditory cues, and masked, spatialized auditory cues. Results indicated a significant reduction in visual search time from the no-cue condition when either auditory cue type was presented, with the masked auditory condition slower. The results of this study can inform attempts to improve visual search performance in operational environments, such as determining appropriate display types for providing spatial information.
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8

Vander Zanden, Sarah. "Productive taboos: cultivating spatialized literacy practices." Pedagogies: An International Journal 10, no. 2 (December 16, 2014): 177–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1554480x.2014.985299.

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9

Mont‐Reynaud, Bernard. "Spatialized computation in sound and music." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 84, S1 (November 1988): S169. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2025952.

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10

Arnold, Noelle Witherspoon, and Emily R. Crawford. "Metaphors of leadership and spatialized practice." International Journal of Leadership in Education 17, no. 3 (December 3, 2013): 257–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13603124.2013.835449.

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Bonfante, Francesca. "Spatialized corporatism between town and countryside." SHS Web of Conferences 63 (2019): 02003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20196302003.

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This contribution deals with the relationship between town planning, architectural design and landscape in the foundation of “new towns” in Italy. In doing so, I shall focus on the Pontine Marshes, giving due consideration to then emerging theories about the fascist corporate state, whose foundation act may be traced back to Giuseppe Bottai’s “Charter of Labour”. This political-cultural “model” purported a clear hierarchy between settlements, each bound for a specific role, for which specific functions were to be assigned to different parts of the city. Similarly, cultivations in the countryside were to specialise. In the Pontine Marshes, Littoria was to become a provincial capital and Sabaudia a tourist destination, Pontinia an industrial centre and Aprilia an eminently rural town. Whereas the term “corporatism” may remind the guild system of the Middle Age, its 1930s’ revival meant to effectively supports the need for a cohesive organization of socio-economic forces, whose recognition and classification was to support the legal-political order of the state. What was the corporate city supposed to be? Some Italian architects rephrased this question: what was the future city in Italy of the hundred cities? Bringing to the fore the distinguishing character of the settlements concerned, and based on the extensive literature available, this contribution discusses the composition of territorial and urban space, arguing that, in the Pontine Marshes, this entails the hierarchical triad farm-village-city, as well as an extraordinary figurative research at times hovering towards “classicism”, “rationalism” or “picturesque”. Composition and figuration are therefore not homogeneous, nor mere expressions of the fascist regime. They show instead a constant research, between aesthetics and practice, of an idea of modern city, of public space, of balance between city and countryside.
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GREGOIRE, C., and M. RAFFY. "A spatialized APAR for heterogeneous pixels." International Journal of Remote Sensing 15, no. 12 (August 1994): 2393–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01431169408954252.

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13

Fabrikant, Sara I. "Spatialized Browsing in Large Data Archives." Transactions in GIS 4, no. 1 (January 2000): 65–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9671.00038.

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Umbelino, Luís António. "Onto-phenomenology of Spatial Memory in Adumbrations." Phainomenon 26, no. 1 (October 1, 2017): 185–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/phainomenon-2017-0010.

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Abstract As we turn to the lived experience of memory, we are confronted with an eerie and enigmatic possibility: the possibility to remember what we ourselves never lived. How to explain phenomenologically this enigmatic but fundamental level of spatialized memory? I would like to come back to these issues in order to face yet another fundamental question: Does a phenomenology of spatialized memory require any onto-phenomenological concretizations?
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15

Hendrix, Claudia, and Woodrow Barfield. "The Sense of Presence within Auditory Virtual Environments." Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments 5, no. 3 (January 1996): 290–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/pres.1996.5.3.290.

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Two studies were performed to investigate the sense of presence within stereoscopic virtual environments as a function of the addition or absence of auditory cues. The first study examined the presence or absence of spatialized sound, while the second study compared the use of nonspatialized sound to spatialized sound. Sixteen subjects were allowed to navigate freely throughout several virtual environments and for each virtual environment, their level of presence, the virtual world realism, and interactivity between the participant and virtual environment were evaluated using survey questions. The results indicated that the addition of spatialized sound significantly increased the sense of presence but not the realism of the virtual environment. Despite this outcome, the addition of a spatialized sound source significantly increased the realism with which the subjects interacted with the sound source, and significantly increased the sense that sounds emanated from specific locations within the virtual environment. The results suggest that, in the context of a navigation task, while presence in virtual environments can be improved by the addition of auditory cues, the perceived realism of a virtual environment may be influenced more by changes in the visual rather than auditory display media. Implications of these results for presence within auditory virtual environments are discussed.
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16

Stocker, Kurt. "Toward an Embodied Cognitive Semantics." Cognitive Semantics 1, no. 2 (August 18, 2015): 178–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23526416-00102002.

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This article strives to move forward toward an embodied account of cognitive semantics. Using current empirical embodiment findings and theoretical interpretations thereof, the major schematic systems of Talmyan cognitive semantics (configurational structure, attention, perspective, and force dynamics) are all presented within one unified embodied account. It will be shown that there is much empirical evidence that thought is spatialized and that our eyes project this spatialized thought into the external (usually near) space in front of our body. This—eyes projecting spatialized thought into peripersonal space—will be called the theory of ocular cognitive semantics (and will sometimes also more generally be referred to as the theory of the ocular mind). Ocular cognitive semantics is meant to be a first step forward toward a more comprehensive theory of embodied cognitive semantics. Clinical implications of ocular cognitive semantics for people with schizophrenia are discussed.
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Holmes, Kevin J., Candelaria Alcat, and Stella F. Lourenco. "Is Emotional Magnitude Spatialized? A Further Investigation." Cognitive Science 43, no. 4 (April 2019): e12727. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cogs.12727.

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Ross, Miriam, and Alex Munt. "Cinematic virtual reality: Towards the spatialized screenplay." Journal of Screenwriting 9, no. 2 (June 1, 2018): 191–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/josc.9.2.191_1.

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McGrath, David Stanley. "Methods and apparatus for processing spatialized audio." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 111, no. 4 (2002): 1512. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.1479025.

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20

Fréon, Pierre, Laurent Drapeau, Jeremy H. M. David, Almudena Fernández Moreno, Rob W. Leslie, W. Herman Oosthuizen, Lynne J. Shannon, and Carl D. van der Lingen. "Spatialized ecosystem indicators in the southern Benguela." ICES Journal of Marine Science 62, no. 3 (January 1, 2005): 459–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icesjms.2004.12.010.

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Abstract Based on published distribution maps of 15 key fish species, foraging areas of three top predators during their breeding season, and fishing grounds of the main commercial fleets in the southern Benguela ecosystem, seven spatialized ecosystem indicators are derived: biodiversity, connectivity, mean ratio of fished area and area of distribution by species, exploited fraction of the ecosystem surface area, total catch per fished area by fishery, mean bottom depth of catches, and mean distance of catches from the coast. These indicators are compared and their suitability for an ecosystem approach to fisheries is discussed. The first two indicators characterize the ecosystem; the others are pressure indicators that are also compared with conventional (catch rate) indices of abundance.
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Hale, Kelly S., David Jones, Kay Stanney, and Laura Milham. "Adding Modalities to VE Training Systems Enhances Spatial Knowledge Acquisition." Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 49, no. 26 (September 2005): 2253–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/154193120504902608.

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An empirical study was completed to investigate the effects of audition on spatial knowledge acquisition and workload within a virtual training environment. Four levels of audio were investigated including no audio, non-spatialized audio, and two forms of spatialized audio. While all training conditions led to significant decreases in workload, mental demand associated with knowledge of relative locations of dangerous areas was significantly less when trained with sound cues. The results also indicated that training with generalized spatial audio enhanced concentration. Results from this study outline the benefits of training with metaphoric audio cues to enhance spatial awareness. Future research will empirically examine effects of metaphoric haptic cues.
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Roup, Christina M., Sarah D. Ferguson, and Devan Lander. "The relationship between extended high-frequency hearing and the binaural spatial advantage in young to middle-aged firefighters." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 154, no. 4 (October 1, 2023): 2055–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/10.0021172.

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Relationships between extended high-frequency (EHF) thresholds and speech-in-spatialized noise were examined in firefighters with a history of occupational noise and airborne toxin exposure. Speech recognition thresholds were measured for co-located and spatially separated (±90° azimuth) sentences in a competing signal using the Listening in Spatialized Noise–Sentences test. EHF hearing was significantly correlated with the spatial advantage, indicating that firefighters with poorer EHF thresholds experienced less benefit from spatial separation. The correlation between EHF thresholds and spatial hearing remained significant after controlling for age. Deficits in EHF and spatial hearing suggest firefighters may experience compromised speech understanding in job-related complex acoustic environments.
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Sun, Zheng, Feng Liu, Decai Wang, Huayong Wu, and Ganlin Zhang. "Improving 3D Digital Soil Mapping Based on Spatialized Lab Soil Spectral Information." Remote Sensing 15, no. 21 (November 3, 2023): 5228. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs15215228.

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Readily available environmental covariates in current digital soil mapping usually do not indicate the spatial differences between deep soil attributes. This, to a large extent, leads to a decrease in the accuracy of 3D soil mapping with depth, which seriously affects the quality of soil information generated. This study tested the hypothesis that spatialized laboratory soil spectral information can be used as environmental covariates to improve the accuracy of 3D soil attribute mapping and proposed a new type of environmental covariable. In the first step, with soil-forming environmental covariates and independent soil profiles, laboratory vis-NIR spectral data of soil samples resampled into six bands in Anhui province, China, were spatially interpolated to generate spatial distributions of soil spectral measurements at multiple depths. In the second step, we constructed three sets of covariates using the laboratory soil spectral distribution maps at multiple depths: conventional soil-forming variables (C), conventional soil-forming variables plus satellite remote sensing wavebands (C+SRS) and conventional soil-forming variables plus spatialized laboratory soil spectral information (C+LSS). In the third step, we used the three sets of environmental covariates to develop random forest models for predicting soil attributes (pH; CEC, cation exchange capacity; Silt; SOC, soil organic carbon; TP, total phosphorus) at multiple depths. We compared the 3D soil mapping accuracies between these three sets of covariates based on another dataset of 132 soil profiles (collected in the 1980s). The results show that the use of spatialized laboratory soil spectral information as additional environmental covariates has a 50% improvement in prediction accuracy compared with that of only conventional covariates, and a 30% improvement in prediction accuracy compared with that of the satellite remote sensing wavebands as additional covariates. This indicates that spatialized laboratory soil spectral information can improve the accuracy of 3D digital soil mapping.
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Maldonado, Marta, and Adela Licona. "Re-thinking Integration as Reciprocal and Spatialized Process." Journal of Latino/Latin American Studies 2, no. 4 (September 2007): 128–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.18085/llas.2.4.k0707x41711t6106.

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Hampton, Andrew, Valerie L. Shalin, Eric Robinson, Brian Simpson, Victor Finomore, Jeffery Cowgill, Thomas Moore, Terry Rapoch, and Robert Gilkey. "The Impact of Spatialized Communications on Team Navigation." Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 56, no. 1 (September 2012): 463–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1071181312561045.

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Grim, Patrick, Trina Kokalis, Ali Tafti, and Nicholas Kilb. "Evolution of communication with a spatialized genetic algorithm." Evolution of Communication 3, no. 2 (December 31, 1999): 105–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/eoc.3.2.02gri.

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We extend previous work by modeling evolution of communication using a spatialized genetic algorithm which recombines strategies purely locally. Here cellular automata are used as a spatialized environment in which individuals gain points by feeding from drifting food sources and are 'harmed' if they fail to hide from migrating predators. Our individuals are capable of making one of two arbitrary sounds, heard only locally by their immediate neighbors. They can respond to sounds from their neighbors by opening their mouths or by hiding. By opening their mouths in the presence of food they maximize gains; by hiding when a predator is present they minimize losses. We consider the result a 'natural' template for benefits from communication; unlike a range of other studies, it is here only the recipient of communicated information that immediately benefits. A community of'perfect communicators' could be expected to make a particular sound when successfully feeding, responding to that same sound from their neighbors by opening their mouths. They could be expected to make a different sound when 'hurt' and respond to that second sound from their neighbors by hiding. Suppose one starts from a small set of 'Adam and Eve' strategies randomized across a cellular automata array, and uses a genetic algorithm which operates purely locally by cross-breeding strategies with their most successful neighbors. Can one, in such an environment, expect evolution of local communities of 'perfect communicators'? With some important qualifications, the answer is 'yes'.
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Ward, Darren B., and Gary W. Elko. "Robust and adaptive spatialized audio for desktop conferencing." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 105, no. 2 (February 1999): 1099. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.425149.

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Ballas, James A. "Method and apparatus for producing spatialized audio signals." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119, no. 4 (2006): 1913. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2195822.

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Kenway, Jane, and Anna Hickey-Moody. "Spatialized leisure-pleasures, global flows and masculine distinctions." Social & Cultural Geography 10, no. 8 (December 2009): 837–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14649360903311864.

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Alonso-Sanz, Ramón. "The Spatialized, Continuous-Valued Battle of the Sexes." Dynamic Games and Applications 2, no. 2 (February 28, 2012): 177–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13235-012-0042-y.

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Grim, Patrick. "The greater generosity of the spatialized prisoner’s dilemma." Journal of Theoretical Biology 173, no. 4 (April 1995): 353–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/jtbi.1995.0068.

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Setti, Walter, Luigi F. Cuturi, Giulio Sandini, and Monica Gori. "Changes in audio-spatial working memory abilities during childhood: The role of spatial and phonological development." PLOS ONE 16, no. 12 (December 14, 2021): e0260700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0260700.

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Working memory is a cognitive system devoted to storage and retrieval processing of information. Numerous studies on the development of working memory have investigated the processing of visuo-spatial and verbal non-spatialized information; however, little is known regarding the refinement of acoustic spatial and memory abilities across development. Here, we hypothesize that audio-spatial memory skills improve over development, due to strengthening spatial and cognitive skills such as semantic elaboration. We asked children aged 6 to 11 years old (n = 55) to pair spatialized animal calls with the corresponding animal spoken name. Spatialized sounds were emitted from an audio-haptic device, haptically explored by children with the dominant hand’s index finger. Children younger than 8 anchored their exploration strategy on previously discovered sounds instead of holding this information in working memory and performed worse than older peers when asked to pair the spoken word with the corresponding animal call. In line with our hypothesis, these findings demonstrate that age-related improvements in spatial exploration and verbal coding memorization strategies affect how children learn and memorize items belonging to a complex acoustic spatial layout. Similar to vision, audio-spatial memory abilities strongly depend on cognitive development in early years of life.
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Luck, Neil. "Sensory Excess: The London Premiere of Confessions." TDR/The Drama Review 64, no. 3 (September 2020): 150–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/dram_a_00948.

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Spatial Opera Company’s original work Confessions is an internationally acclaimed collaborative performance work that surrounds a blindfolded audience, employing spatialized sound and music in a reverberant natural acoustic to stimulate a heightened, imaginative response.
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IWAYA, Yukio, Takeru CHIBA, Makoto OTANI, Satoshi YAIRI, Maori KOBAYASHI, and Yôiti SUZUKI. "Consideration of Effective Acoustic Rendering of Spatialized Ambient Sound." Interdisciplinary Information Sciences 18, no. 2 (2012): 93–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.4036/iis.2012.93.

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Brock, Derek, James A. Ballas, Janet L. Stroup, and Brian McClimens. "Using spatialized sound cues in an auditorily rich environment." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 115, no. 5 (May 2004): 2458. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4782311.

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Polli, Andrea. "Atmospherics/Weather Works: A Spatialized Meteorological Data Sonification Project." Leonardo 38, no. 1 (February 2005): 31–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon.2005.38.1.31.

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Atmospherics/Weather Works is a performance, installation and distributed software project for the sonification of storms and other meteorological events, generated directly from data produced by a highly detailed and physically accurate simulation of the weather.
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Sassen, Saskia. "The City: Between Topographic Representation and Spatialized Power Projects." Art Journal 60, no. 2 (June 2001): 12–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00043249.2001.10792059.

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Kasper, Christoph, Juliane Brandt, Katharina Lindschulte, and Undine Giseke. "The urban food system approach: thinking in spatialized systems." Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 41, no. 8 (May 30, 2017): 1009–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21683565.2017.1334737.

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Özata, Tolga. "Visibility through invisibility: Spatialized political subjectivities of Alevi youth." New Perspectives on Turkey 62 (April 9, 2020): 3–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/npt.2020.5.

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AbstractThis article investigates Alevi youth subjectivities in a neighborhood of İstanbul, Okmeydanı, in which mainly Alevi people live, through the youth’s self-positionings in revolutionary groups, which has deeply marked the highly politicized history of the district. The grievances of Okmeydanlı Alevi youth have grown increasingly complex, stemming from experiences of violence, family legacies of victimhood, and, in recent years, new forms of exclusion. Coupled with generational ruptures between youth and their families in experiencing Alevi identity, Alevi youth have created a political identity and collectivity in the sphere of revolutionary politics. In this politicization, Okmeydanı becomes a spatialization of resistance which gives the youth a sense of power to achieve solidarity and find intimacy to defend themselves and their rights. Moreover, for the youth, engaging in a revolutionary political identity enables them to define themselves and redefine Alevi identity in contrast with, and sometimes against, the perceptions of their families. I argue that it is through this performativity that Okmeydanlı Alevi youth achieve self-empowerment and identity construction; and through this performativity in street politics that the youth render their agencies and self-representations visible on public space.
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Sassen, Saskia. "The City: Between Topographic Representation and Spatialized Power Projects." Art Journal 60, no. 2 (2001): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/778059.

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Yoshida, Sanroku. "The Burning Tree: The Spatialized World of Kenzaburō Ōe." World Literature Today 69, no. 1 (1995): 10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40150850.

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Julien, Charles-Antoine, France Bouthillier, and John Leide. "Spatialized information visualizations: a “BASSTEP” approach to application design." Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 43, no. 1 (October 10, 2007): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/meet.14504301315.

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Costa Abreu Lopes, Felipe, and Irani Dos Santos. "SOIL THICKNESS SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION INFLUENCE ON FACTOR OF SAFETY EQUATION." Brazilian Geographical Journal 12, no. 1 (June 28, 2021): 75–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.14393/bgj-v12n1-a2021-54676.

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Mass movements occurrences are well studied, however there are still possible improvements regarding their factor of safety simulation. This paper focus on the influence of spatialized pedological data and geotechnical data, two of the major limitations for this type of modeling. Numerous mass movements were triggered by an extreme precipitation event in southern Brazil, when the rainwaters reached 300mm in just 24 hours. A local watershed was chosen for field campaigns to supply a safety factor model and show the direct influence of field data on the result efficiency. For this, four different scenarios were created using combination of field data and spatialized soil thickness throughout the watershed area. The results showed an improve of 12% on the simulation efficiency when compared to a homogeneus soil thickness and average geotechnical values scenario, showing the importance of field studies for factor of safety simulations.
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44

McGinley, Paige. "Next Up Downtown: A New Generation of Ensemble Performance." TDR/The Drama Review 54, no. 4 (December 2010): 11–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/dram_a_00022.

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The work of seven up-and-coming performance companies—Hotel Savant, Temporary Distortion, New Paradise Laboratories, Knife, Inc., Ex.Pgirl, Witness Relocation, and Banana Bag & Bodice—explores intermediality transnationalism, and political affect. All emphasize the continued dominance of networked, spatialized storytelling.
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Villanueva, George. "Chitown Loves You." Journal of Popular Music Studies 31, no. 2 (June 2019): 127–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jpms.2019.312011.

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Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign rhetoric about violence in Chicago spatialized a narrative that branded the city as the poster child of urban disarray. His bombast lacked any contextual understanding of the issue and offered no productive pathways for collective solutions. Alternatively, I argue in this paper that a rising collection of Chicago hip hop artists were producing musical discourses in 2016 that not only challenged Trump’s negative rants, but also spatialized a multilayered narrative of the intersections between hip hop and activism in the city. Through textual analysis of three tracks from three breakout artists in 2016, my goal is to show how hip hop enables audiences to imagine Chicago’s 1) structural resistance to violence in the city’s communities of color, 2) a sense of place and belonging among the city’s youth, and 3) a loving and unapologetic “black liberation” lens to social movements in the city.
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Solomon, Marisa. "“The Ghetto is a Gold Mine”: The Racialized Temporality of Betterment." International Labor and Working-Class History 95 (2019): 76–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547919000024.

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AbstractGentrification makes trash a discursive and material index of degeneration, mobilizing projects to “clean” and “better” neighborhoods and people. This ethnographic article explores how trash's movements and labor reveal the spatialized and temporalized racial histories of neighborhood transformation in the historically black neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant (Bed-Stuy), Brooklyn and the gentrified town of Norfolk, Virginia. Foregrounding the objects and people whose value(s) are called into question as the context around them changes, I draw on two key interlocutors whose scavenging is conditioned by the “betterment”—community revitalization and “clean up”—programs that seek to displace them. As Sal “saves” Bed-Stuy by directing the flow of the dismembered ghetto, Superfly redirects coffee shop ephemera to black barbershops. By attending to how trash moves, Sal's and Superfly's labor make visible the material conditions of gentrification and point to how race and time are spatialized under racial capitalism.
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Yang, Hui, Jinhong Liu, Leichao Bai, and Mingliang Luo. "Similarity Analysis: Revealing the Regional Difference in Geomorphic Development in Areas with High and Coarse Sediment Yield of the Loess Plateau in China." ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 11, no. 4 (March 28, 2022): 227. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijgi11040227.

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The development of loess landforms is controlled by underlying, pre-existing paleotopography. Previous studies have focused on the inheritance of loess landform and the control of underlying paleotopography on modern terrain based on the digital elevation model (DEM), while the similarities and differences between modern terrain and underlying paleotophotography have not been directly spatialized. In this study, areas with high and coarse sediment yield (AHCSY) in the Loess Plateau of China were selected to form the study area, and the DEM of the study area’s underlying paleotophotography was reconstructed using detailed geological maps, loess thickness maps, and underlying paleotopographic information. The hypsometric integral (HI) and spatial similarity analysis methods were used to compare the spatialized difference between underlying and modern terrain of the Loess Plateau from the perspectives of the landform development stage and surface elevation, respectively. The results of the HI method demonstrate that essentially, there are similarities between the geomorphologic development stages of underlying and modern terrain, and only some local differences exist in some special areas. The results regarding the spatialized coefficient of relative difference and the Jensen–Shannon divergence demonstrate that the thicker the loess is, the weaker the similarity is, and vice versa. Meanwhile, according to the present loess landform division, the order of regional similarity from low to high is as follows: loess tableland, broken loess tableland, hilly regions, dunes, and the Yellow River Trunk. The use of the similarity analysis method to analyze similarities between underlying and modern terrain plays an important role in revealing the inheritance of loess landforms.
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Dos Santos, Salem Leandro Moura, and Eliomar Pereira Da Silva Filho. "SPATIALIZATION OF PHYSICAL, MECHANICAL AND CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SOILS IN DIFFERENT MODELS OF SLOPES IN PORTO VELHO – BRAZILIAN AMAZON." REVISTA FOCO 16, no. 8 (August 14, 2023): e2819. http://dx.doi.org/10.54751/revistafoco.v16n8-072.

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In this study, it sought to spatialize the mechanical, physical and chemical soil parameters in 3 different slope models (Convex, Rectilinear and Concave) in Oxisols under the Tabular relief of the Belmont basin stream in Porto Velho city, Rondônia state - Brazil. For analysis of the slopes, topographic plots of the soil in the top, middle and bottom up to 1.5 m in depth were used in auger and trenches,spatialized by interpolation. It was observed that the Convex slopes followed by the Rectilinear slopes presented higher clay content in the soils, with an increase in sand to the foothills. The organic matter in the slopes indicated that the Concave format presents the greatest amount of these, followed by Rectilinear and Convex. The infiltration revealed that the Convex and Rectilinear are similar, with greater infiltration at the top, however, the Concave slope showed the least infiltration at the top. The middle of the slopes stands out, which registered the lowest pH values. The justification would be that in the middle of the slopes there is a greater slope and greater water flow, which contributes to a greater circulation of organic acids from organic matter in the superficial layers and upstream.
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Hodúlová, Tereza. "Krize sousedství? Narušení prostorovosti kultury argentinského zahradního města Lomas del Palomar." Český lid 108, no. 4 (December 15, 2021): 431–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.21104/cl.2021.4.02.

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The Argentinian garden city of Lomas del Palomar was formerly, socially and spatially, a very specific neighbourhood in Argentina. It was designed by the German architect Zeyen and was built on a human scale with a self-contained community. Recently, it has been undergoing a material and inner transformation. Elements such as high fences, security cameras and multi-storey buildings that do not respect the original character of the place have had an impact on the residents’ attachment to the place of their home. Employing Setha Low’s theoretical approach of spatialized culture (2017), the aim of this paper is to show how the residents of Ciudad Jardín Lomas del Palomar are attached to the place of their home and neighbourhood and how this attachment is reconceptualized through the current socio-spatial changes of the place. Based on ethnographic research, this paper seeks to explore how these changes affect the spatialized culture of a place through the residents’ everyday perception.
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Buchholz, Jorg M., Harvey Dillon, and Sharon Cameron. "Toward a listening in spatialized noise test using complex tones." Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 133, no. 5 (May 2013): 3330. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4805585.

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