Difference between revisions of "Knowledge cartography"
Caseorganic (Talk | contribs) |
Caseorganic (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | |||
− | |||
===Definition=== | ===Definition=== | ||
"The discipline of mapping intellectual landscapes" [http://www.springer.com/computer/hci/book/978-1-84800-148-0]. | "The discipline of mapping intellectual landscapes" [http://www.springer.com/computer/hci/book/978-1-84800-148-0]. | ||
Line 23: | Line 21: | ||
[[Category:Book Pages]] | [[Category:Book Pages]] | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Marked for Editing]] |
+ | |||
+ | __NOTOC__ |
Revision as of 00:37, 15 February 2011
Definition
"The discipline of mapping intellectual landscapes" [1].
Knowledge Cartography (Book)
Author: Marco Quaggiotto, 2008
Project Description
"Knowledge Cartography is part of a PhD research on the visual representation of knowledge. The aim of the research is to extend the cartographic metaphor beyond visual analogy, and to expose it as a narrative model and tool to intervene in complex, heterogeneous, dynamic realities, just like those of human geography".
Website: Knowledge Cartography (Book)
Focus of Knowledge Cartography
"The map as narration is thus the expression of a communicative purpose. Just like a text, the map makes selections on reality, distorts events, classifies and clarifies the world in order to selections better tell a particular aspect of a territory, an event, a space. When used with malice, it can hide, conceal, falsify or diminish a reality through the construction of an ideological discourse, in which the communicative aims are hidden to the user. In this context, the term ‘map’ is a synonym of visual narration of space: a cultural artefact created by an author to describe a space according to an objective" [2].