CumInCAD is a Cumulative Index about publications in Computer Aided Architectural Design
supported by the sibling associations ACADIA, CAADRIA, eCAADe, SIGraDi, ASCAAD and CAAD futures

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_id eaea2009_piga
id eaea2009_piga
authors Piga, Barbara E.A.
year 2011
title The Urban Simulation and Projects Evaluation Laboratory at the Politecnico di Milano: An Educational and Research Facility
source Projecting Spaces [Proceedings of the 9th European Architectural Endoscopy Association Conference / ISBN 978-3-942411-31-8 ], pp. 115-120
summary At the beginning of 2007 an Italian Urban Simulation Laboratory was founded at the Politecnico di Milano. The laboratory, coordinated by prof. Fausto Curti, has been developed thanks to the one year presence of the visiting professor Peter Bosselmann, director of the Environmental Simulation Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley. The laboratory has an interdisciplinary approach and a threefold mission: experiment, using the laboratory setting to study urban projects at different scales; communicate, aiding public communication by making urban projects understandable to everyone; integrate and innovate, working on different kind of simulations techniques in an integrated way. In its initial experience the laboratory is primarily a didactic and research facility. Students can join the work and participate actively to the research. Until now about 40 students have worked with us, more than a half were foreign students from all over the world. The majority of the students did an internship of about 150 (three-year degree) or 300 (master degree) hours and some of them have continued working after this period developing a thesis. At the moment the case study, used as a pilot research, is about the Porta Nuova project at the Garibaldi- Repubblica area in Milan. The 300.000 mq of the total area and its well served central position make this place strategic for Milan. In this area the adopted urban transformation plan is creating a new business center that affects redevelopment projects, new infrastructures, and a park. The overall project will overhanging the surroundings city center with some of the highest buildings of its skyline. The importance of the site and the dimension of the project make this case significant to test the use of simulation for supporting evaluations about morphological aspects, comfort conditions, visual impacts, and other aspects that directly influence the quality of the new urban spaces. We are now applying different simulation methodologies in order to better understand the peculiar usefulness of each kind as a tool to support evaluation. As any kind has its own limits we work with different typologies at the same time. We are working with 1:500 scale physical model of a 1 km square of the area and different kind of static and dynamic simulations. We developed, with an external office, a micro-car to move a micro-camera in the maquette. We use this equipment to better explain the project implications to the students by producing subjective shot videos or showing a walk in real-time. To reproduce in a better way some relevant walks through the transformed site we have also produced some videos made of a superimposition of the real existing context and the virtual projects. To do this we used a rendered video of the project superimposed to the filmed promenade of the today condition, previously recorded using steadycam. A lot of static simulations has been employed to better understand the new city configuration from some representative points of view, as for example the roof of the Duomo cathedral. We are now developing some other kinds of analysis such as shadows impact; this is done by using a 1:1000 scale maquette in the Heliodon, but also with some digital tools. In the next future a work with the wind tunnel will help to understand some other comfort implications of the project at the micro-urban scale. The multilayer approach is the main aim of the laboratory and is an important tool to clarify the multidimensional project impacts to the students. In this way the laboratory can be a learning tool, it can stimulate the project process and support decision-making while improving the knowledge about the correct use of simulations for evaluating the cumulative implications of the proposed urban processes.
series other
more http://info.tuwien.ac.at/eaea
last changed 2011/03/04 08:45

_id sigradi2021_226
id sigradi2021_226
authors Pincheira, Milena, Alarcón, Catalina, Rivera, María Isabel and Martínez, Andrea
year 2021
title Daylighting and the Elderly: A Study of Daylight Accessibility and Envelope Retrofit in Southern Chile's Senior Home
source Gomez, P and Braida, F (eds.), Designing Possibilities - Proceedings of the XXV International Conference of the Ibero-American Society of Digital Graphics (SIGraDi 2021), Online, 8 - 12 November 2021, pp. 1333–1344
summary In the next 25 years, the elderly population will increase on average to 65 thousand people annually in Chile (INE, 2018). Their independent living is jeopardized partially for diminished visual capacity that difficult spatial perception. Although light does not correct vision impairment, adequate light levels can respond to the needs of older people as preventing visual errors. This study evaluates daylighting availability in an assisting living residence in a southern city in Chile. A quantitative approach resulted in the identification of envelope-retrofit strategies that allow achieving recommended levels of natural lighting, particularly in shared spaces where residents spend most of the day. The results show that it would be possible to achieve better light availability, as it also allows for a better understanding of the contributions of the building envelope. Finally, the study outlines recommendations for future retrofits that meet requirements for visual comfort for a growing senior population.
keywords Daylighting Accessibility, Senior Home, Daylighting Strategies, Visual Comfort, Computational Simulation.
series SIGraDi
email
last changed 2022/05/23 12:11

_id cf2011_p152
id cf2011_p152
authors Plume, Jim; Mitchell John
year 2011
title An Urban Information Framework to support Planning, Decision-Making & Urban Design
source Computer Aided Architectural Design Futures 2011 [Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Futures / ISBN 9782874561429] Liege (Belgium) 4-8 July 2011, pp. 653-668.
summary This paper reports on a 2-year research project undertaken in collaboration with a state planning authority, a major city municipal council and a government-owned development organisation. The project has involved the design of an urban information model framework with the aim of supporting more informed urban planning by addressing the intersection where an individual building interfaces with its urban context. This adopted approach enables new techniques that better model the city and its processes in a transparent and accessible manner. The primary driver for this project was the challenge provided by the essential incompatibility between legacy GIS (geographic information system) datasets and BIM (building information model) representations of the built form. When dealing with urban scale information, GIS technologies use an overlay mapping metaphor linked to traditional relational database technologies to identify features or regions in the urban landscape and attach attribute data to those in order to permit analysis and informed assessment of the urban form. On the other hand, BIM technologies adopt an object-oriented approach to model the full three-dimensional characteristics of built forms in a way that captures both the geometric and physical attributes of the parts that make up a building, as well as the relationships between those parts and the spaces defined by the building fabric. The latter provides a far richer semantic structure to the data, while the former provides robust tools for a wide range of urban analyses. Both approaches are widely recognised as serving well the needs of their respective domains, but there is a widespread belief that we need to reconcile the two disparate approaches to modelling the real world. This project has sought to address that disjunction between modelling approaches. The UrbanIT project concentrated on two aspects of this issue: the development of a framework for managing information at the precinct and building level through the adoption of an object-oriented database technology that provides a platform for information management; and an exploration of ontology tools and how they can be adopted to facilitate semantic information queries across diverse data sources based on a common urban ontology. This paper is focussed on the first of those two agendas, examining the context of the work, the challenges addressed by the framework and the structure of our solution. A prototype implementation of the framework is illustrated through an urban precinct currently undergoing renewal and redevelopment, finishing with a discussion of future work that comes out of this project. Our approach to the implementation of the urban information model has been to propose extensions to ISO/PAS 16739, the international standard for modelling building information that is commonly known as IFC (Industry Foundation Classes). Our reason for adopting that approach is primarily our deep commitment to the adoption of open standards to facilitate the exchange of information across the built environment professions, but also because IFC is based on a robust object schema that can be used to construct a internet-accessible database able, theoretically, to handle the vast quantity of data needed to model urban-scale information. The database solution comes with well-established protocols for handling data security, integrity, versioning and transaction processing or querying. A central issue addressed through this work is concerned with level of detail. An urban information model permits a very precise and detailed representation of an urban precinct, while many planning analyses rely on simplified object representations. We will show that a key benefit of our approach is the ability to simultaneously maintain multiple representations of objects, making use of the concept of model view definitions to manage diverse analysis needs.
keywords urban information modelling, geographic information systems, city models, interoperability, urban planning, open standards
series CAAD Futures
email
last changed 2012/02/11 19:21

_id ga9813
id ga9813
authors Pontecorvo, Michael Steven
year 1998
title Designing the Undesigned: Emergence as a tool for design
source International Conference on Generative Art
summary Design, as an act and a result, is a natural part of the larger biological context in which we live. It is both a behavior and a tangible side effect of the organic system from which it arises. A design can be characterized as a physical exemplar of the concept of memes, the 'genetic' building blocks of ideas or units of cultural transmission. In this capacity, design has served to extend humankind's reach and ensure and enrich humankind's survival in the full range and variability of conditions the Earth has to offer. In a very real sense, design has 'evolved' its own rich ecosystem, with a robust diversity of elements, dynamics, and interrelationships rivaling that of the organic system from which it derives. In the ecology of design, designs obey laws analogous to the laws of survival and selection that organisms in nature obey. Given the recent advances in understanding and modeling of the biological and physical systems, it is not surprising that artists and designers are now turning to these models as a 'new' resource for the conceptualization and design of structured artifacts and spaces. While there are many fundamental technical issues surrounding development and application of generative models and processes, the relationship of artist to the process of creation is a central issue in the scaling up and widespread accessibility/acceptance of the generative approach. This paper will present a set of observations from the perspective of a small company of artist/ technologists trying to bridge the commercial and artistic application of generative processes. Specifically, the paper will explore some approaches to the designer/system relationship and process control metaphor, the balancing of serendipity and design convergence, the definitions and representations of design spaces, and finally, present some ideas about the future prospects and promising new techniques for generative design.
series other
email
more http://www.generativeart.com/
last changed 2003/08/07 17:25

_id eaea2009_prati_podesta
id eaea2009_prati_podesta
authors Prati, Michele; Giulio M. Podesta
year 2011
title Microcar, a Camera Holder Vehicle for Urban and Architectural Endoscopy Simulation Laboratories
source Projecting Spaces [Proceedings of the 9th European Architectural Endoscopy Association Conference / ISBN 978-3-942411-31-8 ], pp. 121-126
series other
more http://info.tuwien.ac.at/eaea
last changed 2011/03/04 08:45

_id f86b
authors Pratschke, A., Tramontano, M. and Dos Santos Moreira, E.
year 2000
title Designer Wanted! Interface Usuário-Computador,O design de um Diálogo
source SIGraDi’2000 - Construindo (n)o espacio digital (constructing the digital Space) [4th SIGRADI Conference Proceedings / ISBN 85-88027-02-X] Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) 25-28 september 2000, pp. 316-318
summary This paper discusses the designer’s role in the process of computer interfaces production. Understood as virtual spaces, they polarize the user’s attention as they are the vague and little known territory in which user and system can, finally, communicate. For so far, a parallel will be established between the architect’s education as a designer of concrete spaces, whose wideness qualifies him to dialogue with specialized engineers about technical construction matters, and the need of being formed a (new?) professional interface designer, able to dialogue with the experts of technological aspects concerning the building of virtual spaces. The paper also analyses the education of nowadays’ interface designers - computer scientists, web designers, writers, artists, architects and information architects -, searching to identify ways of potentializing their performance.
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2016/03/10 09:58

_id sigradi2003_062
id sigradi2003_062
authors Pratschke, Anja and dos Santos Moreira, Edson
year 2003
title Entre Mnemo e Locus, o design de interfaces do ponto de vista de seu uso (Between Mnemo and Locus, the interface design from the users point of view)
source SIGraDi 2003 - [Proceedings of the 7th Iberoamerican Congress of Digital Graphics] Rosario Argentina 5-7 november 2003
summary A method is proposed for architectural construction of virtual spaces by using structures of mnemotechniques. Defined as belonging to the mind, it is proposed to conceive the virtual space through architectural methods by adding the use of Mnemonics, which is the art and technique of developing and strengthening the memory. The memorization process itself becomes central in the process of constructing the virtual context. Introducing examples in history and recent art applications in virtual reality, this paper proposes the introduction of mnemotechniques for the architectural spatial structuring of the virtual space.
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2016/03/10 09:58

_id sigradi2006_p058c
id sigradi2006_p058c
authors Pratschke, Anja; Ribeiro, Clarissa; La Rocca, Renata and Januário, Fernanda
year 2006
title Da ars mnemônica à ‘ars generativa’: uma reflexão critica sobre a produção arquitetônica na era glocal [From Ars mnemonic to Ars generative: A critical review about the architectural production in a glocal time]
source SIGraDi 2006 - [Proceedings of the 10th Iberoamerican Congress of Digital Graphics] Santiago de Chile - Chile 21-23 November 2006, pp. 308-311
summary The aim of this article is to show the complementarity and actuality of the use of design methods as Mnemonic Structures, Cybernetic and Complexity, for the conception of virtual, mixed or concrete knowledge spaces. The ideas presented in this article inscribe themselves in a larger questioning about the relation of architectural design process and digital culture, discussed in our research group nomads.usp [Center for Interactive Living Studies, http://www.eesc. usp.br/nomads].
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2016/03/10 09:58

_id 5bc7
authors Prestinenza, Luigi
year 1999
title Hyperarchitecture: Spaces in the Electronic Age
source Birkhauser
summary In an age dominated by the Internet and electronic media it is becoming increasingly clear that our perception of space is also undergoing a profound transformation. The author takes the reader on a fascinating journey, revealing who has played a part in this transformation. Avant-garde artists, including Boccioni, Duchamp and Kandinsky, the architect Gropius, philosophers such as Wittgenstein and psychoanalysts like Carl Gustav Jung all contributed to this development. Today, our awareness of traditional architectural space is changing; buildings are being rendered transparent, fleeting and intangible, enhanced by virtual potential. The author looks at works by Rem Koolhaas, Jean Nouvel, Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, James Wines, Daniel Libeskind, Toyo Ito, which reflect building in an age of virtual realism.
series other
last changed 2003/04/23 15:14

_id caadria2021_097
id caadria2021_097
authors Pung, Derek and Janssen, Patrick
year 2021
title P2P Urbanism - Collaborative Generation of Spatial Plans Through Paper Cutting
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2021.2.659
source A. Globa, J. van Ameijde, A. Fingrut, N. Kim, T.T.S. Lo (eds.), PROJECTIONS - Proceedings of the 26th CAADRIA Conference - Volume 2, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and Online, Hong Kong, 29 March - 1 April 2021, pp. 659-668
summary This research presents a vision-based Tangible User Interface that was designed to facilitate the investigation of urban spaces. The analogue-digital process made use of inexpensive paper material and commonly accessible technology like a modern camera-enabled phone. Citizens will use a paper-cutting approach to shape the urban space within an urban block and use the phone as the processing agent communicating with a server in the cloud. A three-dimensional visualisation of the urban block may then be viewed on the phone or the computer. A prototype implementation has been developed that allows simple urban massing to be generated. Preliminary tests with groups of users showed promising results. Instead of a conventional design workshop engagement, participants were able to set up the tool in their own time and space and work collaboratively in small groups to developed diverse types of urban layouts.
keywords P2P Urbanism; Tangible User Interface; OpenCV; Human-Computer Interaction
series CAADRIA
email
last changed 2022/06/07 08:00

_id caadria2019_342
id caadria2019_342
authors Qureshi, Cyrus, Moleta, Tane Jacob and Schnabel, Marc Aurel
year 2019
title Beyond the portal - A Study of the Tangible and Intangible Rituals within Sacred Spaces
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2019.1.525
source M. Haeusler, M. A. Schnabel, T. Fukuda (eds.), Intelligent & Informed - Proceedings of the 24th CAADRIA Conference - Volume 1, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand, 15-18 April 2019, pp. 525-534
summary In its ambitions, the paper aims to propose a proof of concept for a Virtual, Augmented and Mixed (VAM) environment that digitally overlays a multifaith space in order to optimize their use, essentially transforming itself to the spiritual needs of the user. In order to do so, a mixed reality experience was developed by investigating and interpreting both the tangible and intangible rituals of prayer. By incorporating an immersive experience, the project promotes the idea of a multifaith space that moves beyond the notion of an "empty white room (Crompton, 2013, p.487)". To develop an immersive experience that caters to people of all religions or no religion is beyond the scope of this project. Hence, by creating a VAM environment for users of the Muslim faith the project may be able to support design ideologies for others, furthering research in this field.
keywords Tangible and Intangible Rituals; Multifaith Space; Mixed Reality; Digital Mosque
series CAADRIA
email
last changed 2022/06/07 08:00

_id ecaade2023_196
id ecaade2023_196
authors Radomiroviæ, Predrag, Stojakoviæ, Vesna and Deliæ, Vlado
year 2023
title The Influence of the Folding Ceiling Structure on the Room Acoustics
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2023.2.069
source Dokonal, W, Hirschberg, U and Wurzer, G (eds.), Digital Design Reconsidered - Proceedings of the 41st Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (eCAADe 2023) - Volume 2, Graz, 20-22 September 2023, pp. 69–78
summary Adaptability is an essential principle for space multifunctionality. Given that different purposes set different acoustic requirements, adapting one space to different uses is a challenge. Thus, the paper presents a design proposal for a kinetic suspended ceiling made of canvas membrane, implemented in the test performance hall. Such a design aims to improve the control of the reverberation time in the hall. The kinetic structure is divided into panels with the possibility of changing the position in height and rotation. The panels' rotation leads to the structure's unfolding, which leads to the acoustic joining of the hall space with the ceiling interspace, and the diffuse reflection of sound. Experimental modeling simulation using the Odeon software tool and numerical calculation using Sabin's equation is applied for the research. The research was carried out in two phases. In the first phase, a software model examined the influence of the rotation angle from 0° (flat ceiling) to 90° (completely open ceiling) on the reverberation time. In the second phase, through a comparative analysis of the test model with an implemented suspended ceiling at different heights, the influence of the position of the ceiling in height in combination with the panel rotation was simultaneously examined. The study results in a new approach to the design of folding structures with the possibility of simple installation in existing spaces of performance halls and knowledge of how this type of structure can enable the control of the reverberation time in the hall.
keywords Parametric design, Room acoustics, Folding structures, Kinetic membranes, Reverberation time
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2023/12/10 10:49

_id 2006_276
id 2006_276
authors Rafi, Ahmad
year 2006
title ILUDS - An Interactive Land Use Database System for Intelligent Cities
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2006.276
source Communicating Space(s) [24th eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9541183-5-9] Volos (Greece) 6-9 September 2006, pp. 276-279
summary This paper presents the i-putra business channel, a portal that has been completed with a comprehensive database of information relating to commercial and residential properties, and other on-going development components of Putrajaya, one of Malaysia’s intelligent cities. Designers were provided with multimedia-rich information of spaces before making a selection through the Interactive Land Use Database System (ILUDS) which hosted more than 67,000 units of residential and commercial areas in Putrajaya. The database was developed based on category searching features that aimed to be the one-stop brief explanatory system on the Internet. ILUDS depicts an innovative idea for city and urban development to prepare information and virtual interactivities for a better usage in a ‘soft city’ design. The system has the underlying structure that allows for partitioning and ease of handling within which the data can be structured under a graphical interface that facilitates editing, manipulation, attribution and updating. This attribute of city information and associate data offers users a different level of interactivity and provides effective use on architectural and city information.
keywords ILUDS; intelligent community; intelligent cities; database
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:59

_id caadria2008_54_session5b_445
id caadria2008_54_session5b_445
authors Rafi, Ahmad; Mastura Yunan, Mazlan Mahadzir, Abdul Halim
year 2008
title Virtual reality as a design education: A Malaysian experience
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2008.445
source CAADRIA 2008 [Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia] Chiang Mai (Thailand) 9-12 April 2008, pp. 445-451
summary This paper presents our attempts on virtual reality curriculum development for the past four years as one of the multimedia-based degrees. It will give an overview, goals and outcomes of the virtual reality (VR) curriculum with varieties of virtual reality systems, interactions and design theories used at different level of studies. It also highlights issues related to designing virtual spaces and the approach used to suggest a good storytelling. This paper will also explore, report and demonstrate the use of non-immersive virtual reality system based on a study in a problem-based learning environment of a virtual reality majoring. Following early encouraging first round results this paper concludes that experiential design could be one of the effective approaches for a problem-based learning and richer content creation of virtual environment (VE) design. It also suggests that the presence of motions, different field of views, interactivities and stereoscopic visions are attributes of three-dimensional (3D) visualization that contribute to better understanding and designing virtual environments.
keywords Virtual reality; design education; problem-based learning; virtual environment
series CAADRIA
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:59

_id 2006_566
id 2006_566
authors Rafi, Ahmad; Mohamad Izani Zainal Abidin; Avijit Paul and Aishah Abdul Razak
year 2006
title Simulation of architectural lighting in a virtual environment - A case study on real and fake High Dynamic Range Images (HDRI)
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2006.566
source Communicating Space(s) [24th eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9541183-5-9] Volos (Greece) 6-9 September 2006, pp. 566-572
summary The early findings of this research were presented in eCAADe 2005 International Conference, Lisbon primarily to highlight the concept of High Dynamic Range Images (HDRI) when representing architectural spaces in the form of still images. An experiment had been carried out to compare the results between HDRI rendering and ‘conventional’ lighting simulation algorithms namely ray tracing and radiosity. The results were based on static and using the same exposure factors, when capturing HDRI. This project, funded by Intensification Research Priority Area (IRPA) grant continues to present and report HDRI results in a simulation environment. In this paper, we first briefly explain on the concept of real and fake HDRI. Then a comparison experiment is conducted to compare these two methods and discuss the impact and effectiveness of the illumination computation in architectural simulation environment. In order to carry out the experiment, a few models of the architectural scenes were developed. These models were then textured with real photos and manipulated with ‘shaders’, and further rendered using fake and real HDRI techniques. As for the fake HDRI, two methods were developed. The first was using an image as the ambient map and different exposures were created by increasing the value of Hue, V of HSV and saturation. The second involved a series of digital photos with the selection of the brightest and darkest area using Adobe Photoshop to establish the scale of luminosity. A few camera movements were triggered and position for ‘real-time’ rendering simulation. The result of the experiment has shown a significant improvement on the rendering time and quality of the rendering. Finally this paper suggests the selection criteria for choosing real and fake HDRI, and how each technique can be best utilized for architectural representations in a simulation environment.
keywords HDRI; simulation; Real HDRI;Fake HDRI; illumination computation
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:59

_id ijac20031306
id ijac20031306
authors Rall, Juan Carlos
year 2003
title The Digital Environment of Urban Dynamic Analysis
source International Journal of Architectural Computing vol. 1 - no. 3
summary Urban sprawl and complexity are increasing at an alarming rate causing huge energetic waste and affecting the quality of life of people and life on earth in general. This paper proposes Urban Dynamic Analysis as a feasible approach to address this negative phenomenon. Urban Dynamic Analysis is a multidisciplinary holistic method that inquires into temporal relations between structures and related characteristics in cities. A range of simulation tools are being adapted and developed aiming to assess different morphological configurations of urban spaces, to improve the welfare of citizens and to optimise energy consumption. All these tools are based on digital image utilization, with simple computational techniques.
series journal
more http://www.multi-science.co.uk/ijac.htm
last changed 2007/03/04 07:08

_id ijac20032108
id ijac20032108
authors Rana, Sanjay; Batty, Mike
year 2004
title Visualising the Structure of Architectural Open Spaces Based on Shape Analysis
source International Journal of Architectural Computing vol. 2 - no. 1
summary This paper proposes the application of some well known two-dimensional geometrical shape descriptors for the visualisation of the structure of architectural open spaces. The paper demonstrates the use of visibility measures such as distance to obstacles and amount of visible space to calculate shape descriptors such as convexity and skeleton of the open space. The aim of the paper is to indicate a simple, objective and quantifiable approach to understand the structure of open spaces otherwise impossible due to the complex construction of built structures.
series journal
more http://www.multi-science.co.uk/ijac.htm
last changed 2007/03/04 07:08

_id a8d7
authors Rapaport, William J.
year 1990
title Predication, Fiction, and Artificial Intelligence
source 27 (21) p. : ill. May, 1990. 90-11. includes bibliography
summary This paper describes the SNePS knowledge-representation and reasoning system. SNePS is an intentional, propositional, semantic-network processing system used for research in AI. The author looks at how predication is represented in such a system when it is used for cognitive modeling and natural- language understanding and generation. In particular, the author discusses issues in the representation of fictional entities and the representation of propositions from fiction, using SNePS. A brief survey is given of four philosophical ontological theories of fiction and sketch an epistemological theory of fiction (implemented in SNePS) using a story operator and rules allowing propositions to 'migrate' into and out of story 'spaces.'
keywords knowledge, representation, systems, AI, semantic networks, cognition, natural languages, intentionallity
series CADline
last changed 2003/06/02 13:58

_id sigradi2022_25
id sigradi2022_25
authors Raposo, Micaela; Eloy, Sara; Sales Dias, Miguel
year 2022
title Get Together: A digital platform for urban social participation
source Herrera, PC, Dreifuss-Serrano, C, Gómez, P, Arris-Calderon, LF, Critical Appropriations - Proceedings of the XXVI Conference of the Iberoamerican Society of Digital Graphics (SIGraDi 2022), Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Lima, 7-11 November 2022 , pp. 763–774
summary Citizens are the daily users of urban spaces and their facilities. It is important that they collaborate with local authorities for effective management, development, and maintenance of the cities they live in. Public participation although important is still developing in several European cities because its implementation poses difficulties. In this paper we argue that using digital technologies via a participatory digital tool, can empower citizens towards more engagement and collaboration on the city development. Despite the existence of several participation tools, we identified the lack of a tool that allows citizens to collaborate more actively in local development in a simple way. In this paper we introduce Get Together, a tool designed to improve collaboration between citizens and local authorities, that proposes a user experience that enables citizens to create design solutions, promote debate and perform a vote on the preferred solution, while having technical advice from municipal officials’ specialists.
keywords Codesign, Digital Technologies, User experience, Participation, Local Development
series SIGraDi
email
last changed 2023/05/16 16:57

_id ijac201210103
id ijac201210103
authors Rashid, Mahbub
year 2012
title Shape-Sensitive Configurational Descriptions of Building Plans
source International Journal of Architectural Computing vol. 10 - no. 1, 33-52
summary While the traditional graph-theoretic techniques of space syntax are able to provide a rich description of the spatial configuration of buildings, they are not sufficiently shape sensitive. Therefore, techniques are proposed to describe building plans as configurations of spaces taking into consideration the elements of shape explicitly. First, the traditional space syntax techniques are applied to a more shape-sensitive partition of a plan in order to find out if these techniques would reveal any interesting shape property of the plan. Following this, a technique to characterize the spatial units of a plan is suggested taking into consideration how surfaces become visible from these units. Finally, a plan is described as the configuration of triangles defined by the vertices of the shape of the plan, and triangulation is used as a technique for a shape-sensitive description of spatial configuration.
series journal
last changed 2019/07/30 10:55

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