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CfA: Studying Public Perception of Space Imagery

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 6:34 pm
by RJN
http://arxiv.org/abs/1009.0772

Full Title: Aesthetics and Astronomy: Studying the public's perception and understanding of non-traditional imagery from space

Authors: Lisa F. Smith, Jeffrey K. Smith, Kimberly K. Arcand, Randall K. Smith, Jay Bookbinder, Kelly Keach

Abstract:
Some 400 years after Galileo, modern telescopes have enabled humanity to "see" what the natural eye cannot. Astronomical images today contain information about incredibly large objects located across vast distances and reveal information found in "invisible" radiation ranging from radio waves to X-rays. The current generation of telescopes has created an explosion of images available for the public to explore. This has, importantly, coincided with the maturation of the Internet. Every major telescope has a web site, often with an extensive gallery of images. New and free downloadable tools exist for members of the public to explore astronomical data and even create their own images. In short, a new era of an accessible universe has been entered, in which the public can participate and explore like never before. But there is a severe lack of scholarly and robust studies to probe how people - especially non-experts - perceive these images and the information they attempt to convey. Most astronomical images for the public have been processed (e.g., color choices, artifact removal, smoothing, cropping/field-of-view shown) to strike a balance between the science being highlighted and the aesthetics designed to engage the public. However, the extent to which these choices affect perception and comprehension is, at best, poorly understood. The goal of the studies presented here was to begin a program of research to better understand how people perceive astronomical images, and how such images, and the explanatory material that accompanies them, can best be presented to the public in terms of understanding, appreciation, and enjoyment of the images and the science that underlies them.

Re: CfA: Studying Public Perception of Space Imagery

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 7:07 pm
by Beyond
RJN wrote: How astronomical pictures and information about them could best be presented to the public
What i would like to see is that first the picture is presented just as the telescope sees it so people understand how things actually look, when we see them from here. THEN begin showing them useing different filters like when scientists study them, so that the people in general can see that that is how the things are space are studied, so depending on just what is being studied, the different filters used will give a different looking picture.

Re: CfA: Studying Public Perception of Space Imagery

Posted: Fri Sep 10, 2010 7:17 pm
by BMAONE23
What I think would be an interesting "Roll Over" effect would be to have a series of images taken at different depths. Such that the first image is what the unaided eye sees followed by a series of images that blend together over time to indicate what second for second of light gathering brings and the depth of the image creates over the time span. like. Leave your mouse over the image for ten seconds and the image gradually progresses over that 10 second time to indicate the structures visible in 10 seconds of light gathering.