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oapen-20.500.12657-904322024-05-24T02:23:29Z Climate Disaster Preparedness Del Favero, Dennis Thurow, Susanne Ostwald, Michael J. Frohne, Ursula Artificial Intelligence (AI) Aesthetics Climate Change Resilience Climate Imagery Digital Arts and Climate Change Disaster Preparedness Immersive Visualization Virtual Reality Simulation Scenario Modelling Intelligent Systems thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KJ Business and Management::KJD Business innovation thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNF Environmental management thema EDItEUR::A The Arts::AK Design, Industrial and commercial arts, illustration thema EDItEUR::U Computing and Information Technology::UY Computer science::UYZ Human–computer interaction thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHB Sociology As a result of global warming, extreme events, such as firestorms and flash floods, pose increasingly unpredictable and uncertain existential threats, taking lives, destroying communities, and wreaking havoc on habitats. Current aesthetic, technological and scientific frameworks struggle to imagine, visualise and rehearse human interactions with these events, hampering the development of proactive foresight, readiness and response. This open access book demonstrates how the latest advances in creative arts, intelligent systems and climate science can be integrated and leveraged to transform the visualisation of extreme event scenarios. It reframes current practice from passive perception of pre-scripted illustrations to active immersion in evolving life-like interactive scenarios that are geo-located. Drawing on the multidisciplinary expertise of leaders in the creative arts, climate sciences, environmental engineering, and intelligent systems, this book examines the waysin which climate disaster preparedness can be reformulated through practices that address dynamic and unforeseen interactions between climate and human life worlds. Grouped into four sections (picturing, narrating, rehearsing, and communicating), this book maps this approach by exploring the emerging strengths and current limitations of each discipline in addressing the challenge of envisioning the unpredictable interaction of extreme events with human populations and environments. This book provides a timely intervention into the global discourse on how art, culture and technology can address climate disaster resilience. It appeals to readers from multiple fields, offering academic, industry and community audiences novel insights into a profound gap in the current knowledge, policy and action landscape. 2024-05-23T07:47:26Z 2024-05-23T07:47:26Z 2024 book ONIX_20240523_9783031561146_23 9783031561146 9783031561139 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/90432 eng Arts, Research, Innovation and Society application/pdf n/a 978-3-031-56114-6.pdf https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-56114-6 Springer Nature Springer Nature Switzerland 10.1007/978-3-031-56114-6 10.1007/978-3-031-56114-6 6c6992af-b843-4f46-859c-f6e9998e40d5 5251c6d8-14d4-461c-9bb6-55ba1a373e24 9783031561146 9783031561139 Springer Nature Switzerland 219 Cham [...] open access
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As a result of global warming, extreme events, such as firestorms and flash floods, pose increasingly unpredictable and uncertain existential threats, taking lives, destroying communities, and wreaking havoc on habitats. Current aesthetic, technological and scientific frameworks struggle to imagine, visualise and rehearse human interactions with these events, hampering the development of proactive foresight, readiness and response. This open access book demonstrates how the latest advances in creative arts, intelligent systems and climate science can be integrated and leveraged to transform the visualisation of extreme event scenarios. It reframes current practice from passive perception of pre-scripted illustrations to active immersion in evolving life-like interactive scenarios that are geo-located. Drawing on the multidisciplinary expertise of leaders in the creative arts, climate sciences, environmental engineering, and intelligent systems, this book examines the waysin which climate disaster preparedness can be reformulated through practices that address dynamic and unforeseen interactions between climate and human life worlds. Grouped into four sections (picturing, narrating, rehearsing, and communicating), this book maps this approach by exploring the emerging strengths and current limitations of each discipline in addressing the challenge of envisioning the unpredictable interaction of extreme events with human populations and environments. This book provides a timely intervention into the global discourse on how art, culture and technology can address climate disaster resilience. It appeals to readers from multiple fields, offering academic, industry and community audiences novel insights into a profound gap in the current knowledge, policy and action landscape.
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