Faculty Research

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William Alschuler_Emulsions, Photochemistry, and Processing Factors for Display Holograms_2019.pdf

Emulsions, Photochemistry, and Processing Factors for Display Holograms

This article reviews the range of emulsions, photochemistry, and processing techniques that have been proposed and put into practice for the successful mak- ing of display holograms. It covers various types of media including gelatin-based emulsions and photopolymers (it focuses on the former) and considers external factors that affect the final results. This is a compact review of the history of the field but focuses on the range of easily available commercial emulsions, as well as certain accounts of how to make holographic emulsions from scratch. It considers various combinations of developer, bleach, and redeveloper, which have been used to achieve the best of various trade-offs for such factors as resolution, contrast, dif- fraction efficiency, clarity, color quality, blackest blacks, and resistance to printout. It describes a recent advance in hypersensitizing holographic emulsions.

Author(s): William Alschuler
Type: book chapter
Publication: Holographic Materials and Applications
Status: Live|Last updated:November 3, 2025 4:07 PM
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Rod Cavazos_Type Ascending_2018.pdf

Type Ascending

"Variable Fonts represent an evolutionary shift in typography; let’s check in on this new font standard and the impact it’s having." Published under the Microsoft Design Medium account.

Author(s): Rod Cavazos
Type: journal article
Publication: Microsoft Design
Status: Live|Last updated:November 3, 2025 4:06 PM
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Reflections on the Study of Dream Speech_published article_June 2016.pdf

Reflections on the Study of Dream Speech

Dream speech is an understudied area of dream research worthy of attention for its potential to shed light on the nature of the interactions between the dream-self and dream-others, the patterns of discourse that occur among dream characters, and the structure and content of dream speech itself. The history of the study of dream speech is surveyed. Investigation of the structure and content of dream speech points to interesting similarities and differences in waking, imagined, and dreamed speech. Dream speech data support recent evidence that higher-order cognitive activity is a feature of dreaming no less than of waking thought. The study of dream speech offers a window on understanding dream structure and content more broadly.

Author(s): Patricia Kilroe
Type: journal article
Publication: Dreaming
Status: Live|Last updated:November 3, 2025 4:01 PM
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Stein_To curate in the field.pdf

To curate in the field: archaeological privatization and the aesthetic ‘legislation’ of antiquity in India

This paper strives to pluralize notions of taste in relation to the canonized category of the Hindu or Indian temple. I put ‘Hindu’ in italics because I include Jain temples in my discussion and I put ‘Indian’ in italics because the architecture I discuss predates India as a nation-state and in the twenty-first century includes buildings in South and Southeast Asia as well as the Diaspora. Through a discussion of the Archaeological Preservation Aesthetic (APA) and multiple variants of the Ritual Renovation Aesthetics (RRA), new ways of looking emerge. This paper seeks to reconcile the hegemonic assumptions about art historical taste and the temple within an increasingly global environment. The main argument is predicated on temple users’ practice as a form of curatorial practice in the field and provides a deep description of the multiplication of aesthetics due to increasing privatization of temple administration in India. The tenth-century cluster of temples from the Medapata region (Southern Ra…

Author(s): Deborah L. Stein
Type: journal article
Publication: Contemporary South Asia
Status: Live|Last updated:November 3, 2025 3:55 PM
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Haakon Faste_Intuition in Design_2017.pdf

Intuition in Design: Reflections on the Iterative Aesthetics of Form

Curious to reflect on the factors contributing to the internal decision-making processes of intuitive design, a reflective study was established to systematically examine and document the practice of intuition while performing an iterative aesthetic task. Autoethnographic techniques were used to document the reflective practices that occurred over numerous iterations spanning several weeks of activity. Our analysis concludes with a summary of reflections on how intuition informs judgment in design cognition. We examine four dimensions of intuition in design—efficiency, inspiration, curiosity, and insight—and the reflective and sensory inputs that drive intuitive speculation and impulse.

Author(s): Haakon Faste
Type: book chapter
Publication: Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Status: Live|Last updated:May 7, 2024 12:12 PM
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Alluring Monotony Luminous Grids.pdf

Alluring Monotony + Luminous Grids

The rhythmic repetitions that run through weaving, dance, music, poetry, and prayer are guidelines that can be followed with eyes closed and hands outstretched toward a sensory experience of the sacred. This essay traces the synergies between these somatic practices and the potential of rhythmic entrainment to generate numinous states. As cultural paradigms shift from the disembodied mind to mindful embodiment, weaving and cloth provide models for relational thinking and nonhierarchical structures. The author forwards the notion that the act of weaving sensitizes the body-mind to a perception of the interconnected universe.

Author(s): Deborah Valoma
Type: journal article
Publication: TEXTILE
Status: Live|Last updated:December 1, 2022 7:56 AM
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Stein, Zinc Smelting Images.pdfStein, Zinc Smelting.pdf

Smelting Zinc and Housing the Divine at Jawar

Author(s): Deborah L. Stein
Type: journal article
Publication: Artibus Asiae
Status: Live|Last updated:March 5, 2021 12:58 PM
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Stein, Translating the Year 1299_Art in Translation.pdf

Translating the Year 1299: On Reading Hindi, Sanskrit, Persian, and Arabic in English

Following general reflections on the relations between global media, local and oral history, this paper addresses the paradoxical constraints imposed by language specialization, which focuses Western historians on particular regions and languages at the expense of demotic and oral cultures. Taking up the idea that translation is never an ideologically innocent act, Stein addresses the ambiguous status of English in the Indian context, both as the language of British imperial power, but also as a vehicle for challenging and “writing back” against colonial discourse. To illustrate the linguistic pitfalls that accompany research on South Asian art, the paper investigates the relations between temple art, iconoclasm, and the zinc smelting industry in Jawar, Rajasthan.

Author(s): Deborah L. Stein
Type: journal article
Publication: Art in Translation
Status: Live|Last updated:March 5, 2021 12:44 PM
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Stein_Theft of Amba Mata_PDF.pdf

The theft of the goddess Amba Mata: Ontological location and Georges Bataille’s bas matérialisme

Author(s): Deborah L. Stein
Type: journal article
Publication: Res
Status: Live|Last updated:March 5, 2021 12:35 PM
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Final_Paper_RB.pdf

Toys and Play, Weapons and Warfare: Militarizing the Xbox Controller

In this paper I examine the cultural implications of the United States military’s use of commercial video game controllers as contemporary battle equipment. My research draws on analysis of the academic literature on militarism and video games, controller studies, and media theory, as well as industry sources and mainstream media reporting. The paper is organized into three sections: a history of the relationship between the military and the video game industry, a discussion of the military’s use of Xbox controllers, and an exploration of the causes and consequences of the increasingly blurry line between toys and weapons.

Author(s): Rachel Berger
Type: journal article
Publication: Design Cultures, Cumulus Roma 2020
Status: Live|Last updated:March 5, 2021 9:38 AM
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