Description |
1 online resource |
Contents |
Frontmatter -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- Editorial -- COLOR AND ITS MEANING FOR THE SCIENCES -- Color in Medical Images / Badano, Aldo -- Color as the Other? Absence and Reappearance of Chromophobia in Eighteenth-Century France / Boskamp, Ulrike -- Research on Color Matters: Towards a Modern Archaeology of Ancient Polychromies / Nagel, Alexander -- Do Signs Make Logic Colored? Tendencies Around 1900 and Earlier / Ramharter, Esther -- Coloring the Fourth Dimension? Coloring Polytopes and Complex Curves at the End of the Nineteenth Century / Friedman, Michael -- Encoding Color: Between Perception and Signal / Cedeño Montaña, Ricardo -- MEANINGFUL COLORS IN THE SCIENCES -- Green Is Refreshing: Techniques, Technologies and Epistemologies of Nineteenth-Century Color Therapies / Rossi, Michael -- Pigments, Natural History and Primary Qualities: How Orange Became a Color / Lawson, Ian -- An Evaluation of Color Maps for Visual Data Exploration / Baum, Daniel -- The Use of Color in Geographic Maps / Moser, Jana / Meyer, Philipp -- Historical and Scientific Note of Color Duplex Doppler Ultrasound and Imaging / Moreau, Jean-François / Pisano, Raffaele / Correas, Jean-Michel -- Diagrammatic Traditions: Color in Metabolic Maps / Wülfingen, Bettina Bock von -- Pink and Blue Science. A Gender History of Color in Psychology / Grisard, Dominique -- Image Credits -- Authors |
Summary |
Color makes its way into natural science images as early as the research process. It serves for self-reflection and for communication within the scientific community. However, color does not follow a standard in the natural sciences: its meaning is contingent, even though culturally conditioned. Digital publishing enhances the use of color in scientific publications; at the same time, globalization promotes the idea of universal color symbolism. This book investigates the function of color in historical and current visualizations for scientific purposes, its epistemic role as a tool, and its long neglect due to symbolic and gender-specific connotations. The publication thus closes a research gap in the natural sciences and the humanities |
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Color makes its way into natural science images as early as the research process. It serves for self-reflection and for communication within the scientific community. However, color does not follow a standard in the natural sciences: its meaning is contingent, even though culturally conditioned. Digital publishing enhances the use of color in scientific publications; at the same time, globalization promotes the idea of universal color symbolism. This book investigates the function of color in historical and current visualizations for scientific purposes, its epistemic role as a tool, and its long neglect due to symbolic and gender-specific connotations. The publication thus helps to bridge a long standing research gap in the natural sciences and the humanities |
Analysis |
Image, Color, Science |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Notes |
In English |
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Online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Aug 2019) |
Subject |
Color.
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Visualization.
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Science.
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Polychromy.
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Color
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Science
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sciences (philosophy)
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polychromy.
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color (perceived attribute)
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science (modern discipline)
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ART -- General.
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Color
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Polychromy
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Science
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Visualization
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Genre/Form |
Electronic books
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History
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Bock von Wülfingen, Bettina, editor
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ISBN |
9783110605211 |
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311060521X |
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9783110605204 |
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3110605201 |
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