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The Development of a Workflow in Exploring Non-Linear Interpretations of Textual Spaces.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
The Development of a Workflow in Exploring Non-Linear Interpretations of Textual Spaces./
作者:
Liu, Yisi.
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (480 pages)
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-06, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International84-06B.
標題:
Design. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30171992click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9798358408227
The Development of a Workflow in Exploring Non-Linear Interpretations of Textual Spaces.
Liu, Yisi.
The Development of a Workflow in Exploring Non-Linear Interpretations of Textual Spaces.
- 1 online resource (480 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-06, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Liverpool (United Kingdom), 2022.
Includes bibliographical references
The research presented here develops a consistent workflow to comprehensively study architectural spaces described in textual forms, which are multiply re-created in a user-oriented way, depending on the individual interpretation of each reading of the spaces using representational and analytical tools. The workflow provides a methodological process to investigate the complex interaction between textual spaces, human beings, and their imagined world inspired by textual spaces. User-oriented construction of textual spaces using subjective and multiple interpretations have been noted by researchers in literary theory and iconological studies, who provide the 'interpretation enclosure' concept which is yet to be fully explored and tested in architectural research. Consequently, digital representation tools, including Virtual Reality (VR) techniques, are used to re-interpret textual spaces derived from multiple users, allowing them to re-experience textual spaces in a VR environment, revealing a full picture of how a textual space evolves from an imagined spaces to an interactive virtual environment. Therefore, this research is significant as it provides a discourse incorporating architectural representation and an interpretation enclosure of textual spaces, developing an iterative workflow to test the extent to which digital representation can re-create our imagination. Moreover, this enhances the understanding of textual space and adds to knowledge about the constant interaction between textual spaces, human beings, and their imagined interpretations. Two case studies are used to test the methodological process in different types of textual spaces as interpretation resources, providing specific insights and findings. The first investigates re-creating a demolished family home based on the building users' collective memory. This case enables the workflow to unveil the buildings lost history and highlights the importance of a feedback loop which is used to refine the re-created textual space. Also, this case study acknowledges the use of secondary interpretation to mediate users' conceptual interpretations and the VR-based interpretations. The second case study explores the textual library in Umberto Eco's 'The Name of the Rose', where multiple interpretations are collected as part of the workflow and used to generate a database in the virtual environment. Here users can re-create and experience the textual space. Analysis of data enables factors to be identified that can result in multiplicity, which are incorporated within a digital representation as a database called the 'Interpretation Pipeline (IP)'. A set of interaction systems improves the experience in the VR environment, enabling users to construct an individual interpretation rather than passively experiencing a pre-existing virtual environment. Consequently, this case study successfully develops the workflow on both theoretical and practical levels. The findings provide a comprehensive understanding of how a textual space can be multiply interpreted and enables the workflow to negotiate with textual spaces' interpreters, iteratively refining the interpretation. The findings also acknowledge secondary interpretation's ramifications regarding filling gaps to enrich the VR-based interpretation and activating the feedback loops to mitigate its interference. Consequently, this research proposes a refined methodology that integrates different interpretation resources and optimises testing strategy by informed feedback loops.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2023
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9798358408227Subjects--Topical Terms:
518875
Design.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
The Development of a Workflow in Exploring Non-Linear Interpretations of Textual Spaces.
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Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-06, Section: B.
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Includes bibliographical references
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The research presented here develops a consistent workflow to comprehensively study architectural spaces described in textual forms, which are multiply re-created in a user-oriented way, depending on the individual interpretation of each reading of the spaces using representational and analytical tools. The workflow provides a methodological process to investigate the complex interaction between textual spaces, human beings, and their imagined world inspired by textual spaces. User-oriented construction of textual spaces using subjective and multiple interpretations have been noted by researchers in literary theory and iconological studies, who provide the 'interpretation enclosure' concept which is yet to be fully explored and tested in architectural research. Consequently, digital representation tools, including Virtual Reality (VR) techniques, are used to re-interpret textual spaces derived from multiple users, allowing them to re-experience textual spaces in a VR environment, revealing a full picture of how a textual space evolves from an imagined spaces to an interactive virtual environment. Therefore, this research is significant as it provides a discourse incorporating architectural representation and an interpretation enclosure of textual spaces, developing an iterative workflow to test the extent to which digital representation can re-create our imagination. Moreover, this enhances the understanding of textual space and adds to knowledge about the constant interaction between textual spaces, human beings, and their imagined interpretations. Two case studies are used to test the methodological process in different types of textual spaces as interpretation resources, providing specific insights and findings. The first investigates re-creating a demolished family home based on the building users' collective memory. This case enables the workflow to unveil the buildings lost history and highlights the importance of a feedback loop which is used to refine the re-created textual space. Also, this case study acknowledges the use of secondary interpretation to mediate users' conceptual interpretations and the VR-based interpretations. The second case study explores the textual library in Umberto Eco's 'The Name of the Rose', where multiple interpretations are collected as part of the workflow and used to generate a database in the virtual environment. Here users can re-create and experience the textual space. Analysis of data enables factors to be identified that can result in multiplicity, which are incorporated within a digital representation as a database called the 'Interpretation Pipeline (IP)'. A set of interaction systems improves the experience in the VR environment, enabling users to construct an individual interpretation rather than passively experiencing a pre-existing virtual environment. Consequently, this case study successfully develops the workflow on both theoretical and practical levels. The findings provide a comprehensive understanding of how a textual space can be multiply interpreted and enables the workflow to negotiate with textual spaces' interpreters, iteratively refining the interpretation. The findings also acknowledge secondary interpretation's ramifications regarding filling gaps to enrich the VR-based interpretation and activating the feedback loops to mitigate its interference. Consequently, this research proposes a refined methodology that integrates different interpretation resources and optimises testing strategy by informed feedback loops.
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