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  Colloquia  
  one of the Digital Libraries Colloquium Series
Please join us for a presentation by Lowry Burgess, Lynn Holden and Jeffrey Jacobson. Their talk launches the 2006 Digital Library Colloquium series, sponsored by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh; School of Computer Science and University Libraries, Carnegie Mellon; and School of Information Sciences and University Library System, University of Pittsburgh.
 
     
 

Lowry Burgess, Lynn Holden and Jeffrey Jacobson


Thursday, September 14, 2006
1:00 - 2:00 pm
Earth Theater, Carnegie Museum of Natural History
 
     
 
“Muses in the Library II: The Reality of the Virtual”
 
     
 

ABSTRACT: In great libraries of the past, an individual was surrounded by a vast structure of statues, paintings, frescoes, architecture and gardens, in which mythic and historic meanings of knowledge were encoded. The person was immersed in significant context.

Now, rich frameworks of context can be projected through computer-based virtuality, changing/enhancing the dynamic relationships of the mind to collected objects.

Experience a library of the future, in which central truths of ancient Egyptian culture will be revealed in a large-projection environment. The ³Virtual Egyptian Temple² is part of Lynn Holden¹s ³Virtual Ancient Egypt" (VAE), a digital learning system. Jeffrey Jacobson will talk about VAE¹s connections to electronic libraries, demonstrate visual interfaces to pure information, and reveal how visual interfaces help to create a coherent digital library.

BIO: Lowry Burgess is an internationally renowned environmental artist/poet and educator, professor of art and former dean of the College of Fine Arts at Carnegie Mellon, a fellow in the Studio for Creative Inquiry, a member of the Center for the Arts and Society, and a staunch library supporter and patron.

Dr. Lynn Holden (D. Phil., Yale) is an Egyptologist with extensive museum and academic experience. He provided content direction for the Virtual Egyptian Temple and was a principal designer for the Egypt Hall exhibit at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History.

Jeffrey Jacobson is a doctoral candidate at the School of Information Sciences. His research focus is in the use of virtual reality for museum and classroom education. See http://planetjeff.net

 
     

 

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