4 resultados para Image Collections

em ReCiL - Repositório Científico Lusófona - Grupo Lusófona, Portugal


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With the creationof the moving image at the end of the 19th century a new way of representing and expressing the Religious was born. The cinema industry rapidly understood that film has a powerful way to attract new audiences and transformed the explicit religious message into an implicit theological discourse of the fictional film. Today, the concept of "cinema" needs to be rethought and expanded, as well as the notion of "tTranscendental" since the strong reality effect of the film can allow a true religious experience for the spectator.

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RESUMO: O objectivo deste estudo é identificar o índice da insatisfação corporal e as influências dos meios de comunicação nas atitudes da mulher face á mudança da aparência, controlo do peso e Obesidade. Pretende-se com este estudo caracterizar e relacionar o índice de insatisfação corporal e a influência exercida pelos meios de comunicação social, fazendo um estudo com base nas diferenças entre dois grupos, numa amostra de 118 participantes do sexo feminino. A amostra de conveniência é composta por 59 mulheres diagnosticadas com obesidade mórbida grau III e grau IV, acompanhada no Serviço de Obesidade do Hospital de Santa Maria e numa amostra de 59 mulheres sem o diagnóstico de obesidade mórbida, com idades compreendidas entre os 19 e os 72 anos. O Protocolo de avaliação foi constituído por um questionário com recolhas dos dados demográficos e métodos utilizados pela mulher para o controlo do peso e duas escalas Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire 3 e Body Shape Questionnaire. Verificou-se uma elevada insatisfação corporal e influências dos meios de comunicação no grupo clínico. Foi verificado ainda que a faixa etária das mulheres entre os 26 aos 39 anos são as que mais sofrem influências dos meios de comunicação face as atitudes para mudar a aparência. ABSTRACT: The objective of this study is to identify the index of body dissatisfaction and the influences of media on women's attitudes will change the face looks. It is intended to characterize the study and associate the index of body dissatisfaction and the influences exerted by the media, control and obesity. Doing a study based on the differences between two groups, a sample of 118 participants were female, the non-random sample consisted by 59 women diagnosed with morbid obesity level III and Grade IV, monitored in the Office of Obesity, Hospital de Santa Maria and a random sample of 59 women without a diagnosis of morbid obesity aged between 19 and 72 years. The Protocol of evaluation was made of a questionnaire with collections of demographic data and methods used by women for weight control and two scales Sociocultural Attitudes Towards Appearance Questionnaire 3 and Body Shape Questionnaire. There was high body dissatisfaction and influences of the media in the clinical group. It was also verified that the age group of women among the 26 to 39 years who are suffering most are the influences of the media to change attitudes towards the dark.

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The reading of printed materials implies the visual processing of information originated in two distinct semiotic systems. The rapid identification of redundancy, complementation or contradiction rhetoric strategies between the two information types may be crucial for an adequate interpretation of bimodal materials. Hybrid texts (verbal and visual) are particular instances of bimodal materials, where the redundant information is often neglected while the complementary and the contradictory ones are essential.Studies using the 504 ASL eye-tracking system while reading either additive or exhibiting captions (Baptista, 2009) revealed fixations on the verbal material and transitions between the written and the pictorial in a much higher number and duration than the initially foreseen as necessary to read the verbal text. We therefore hypothesized that confirmation strategies of the written information are taking place, by using information available in the other semiotic system.Such eye-gaze patterns obtained from denotative texts and pictures seem to contradict some of the scarce existing data on visual processing of texts and images, namely cartoons (Carroll, Young and Guertain, 1992), descriptive captions (Hegarty, 1992 a and b), and advertising images with descriptive and explanatory texts (cf. Rayner and Rotello, 2001, who refer to a previous reading of the whole text before looking at the image, or even Rayner, Miller and Rotello, 2008 who refer to an earlier and longer look at the picture) and seem to consolidate findings of Radach et al. (2003) on systematic transitions between text and image.By framing interest areas in the printed pictorial material of non redundant hybrid texts, we have identified the specific areas where transitions take place after fixations in the verbal text. The way those transitions are processed brings a new interest to further research.

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This paper proposes a look at museums from the perspective of sociomuseology, an area of research and practice under development in countries such as Portugal, Brazil and Spain. Sociomuseology was born from the Latin new museology tradition and is closely connected with the International Movement for a New Museology (MINOM/ICOM). The Lusofona University in Lisbon offers MA and PhD programmes in Sociomuseology. The University supports a research centre in Sociomuseology and publishes the journals Cadernos de Sociomuseologia, in Portuguese, and Sociomuseology, in English (for more information see http://tercud.ulusofona.pt.). Sociomuseology concerns the study of the social role of museums and of the continuous changes in society that frame their trajectories. The practice of sociomuseologists is based on their work with the different dimensions of social and community development from ecomuseums to networking and other ways of organizing social action in the 21st century in which heritage plays a strategic role.