2016-10-10

Art History: Italian Renaissance by Vida Hull (ETSU)

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source: East Tennessee State University    2013年9月5日
ARTH 4037 Italian Renaissance - Dr. Vida Hull
ETSU Online Programs - http://www.etsu.edu/online

ARTH 4037 Filippino Lippi 9:22
ARTH 4037 Ghirlandaio 23:03
ARTH 4037 Piero di Cosimo 23:47
ARTH 4037 Perugino 22:33
ARTH 4037 Antonio Pisanello 35:43
ARTH 4037 Antonello da Messina 21:14
ARTH 4037 Andrea Mantegna 50:40
ARTH 4037 Gentile Bellini 7:21
ARTH 4037 Giovanni Bellini 17:41
ARTH 4037 Lorenzo Ghiberti 43:11
ARTH 4037 Nanni Di Banco 14:08
ARTH 4037 Luca Signorelli 12:33
ARTH 2020/4037 Mannerism 1 1:07:31
ARTH 2020/4037 Mannerism 2: Giovanni da Bologna 9:16
ARTH 2020/4037 Italian Renaissance Architecture: Michelozzo 9:33
ARTH 2020/4037 Michelangelo 1 (High Renaissance) 1:06:23
ARTH 2020/4037 Michelangelo 2 (Mannerism) 50:32
ARTH 2020/4037 15th Century Italian Renaissance Painting: Mantegna and Bellini 25:23
ARTH 2020/4037 Raphael 41:54
ARTH 2020/4037 Bramante 24:58
ARTH 2020/4037 High Renaissance: Leonardo da Vinci 1:03:22
ARTH 2020/4037 15th Century Italian Renaissance Sculpture 1:28:23
ARTH 2020/4037 Italian Renaissance Architecture: Brunelleschi 1:03:36
ARTH 2020/4037 Renaissance Characteristics 28:07
ARTH 4037 Venice 40:06
ARTH 2020/4037 Venice 1: Giorgione 24:08
ARTH 2020/4037 Venice 2: Titian (begins) 10:33
ARTH 2020/4037 Venice 3: Titian (continues) 15:58
ARTH 2020/4037 Venice 4: Tintoretto, Veronese, Palladio 43:24
ARTH 2020/4037 15th Century Italian Renaissance Painting: Masaccio and Botticelli 1:18:26
ARTH 4037/4117 Italian Renaissance 8: Marietta Robusti, "La Tintoretta" 9:33
ARTH 4037 Masolino 16:21
ARTH 4037 Gentile da Fabriano 17:35
ARTH 4037 Masaccio 1:15:50
ARTH 4037 Fra Filippo Lippi 35:54
ARTH 4037 Uccello 23:07
ARTH 4037 Andrea del Castagno 39:45
ARTH 4037 Domenico Veneziano 18:37
ARTH 4037 Fra Angelico 44:48
ARTH 4037 Piero della Francesca 1:11:16
ARTH 4037 Simone Martini 30:40
ARTH 4037 Siena in the Trecento 53:37
ARTH 4037 Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti 1:04:33
ARTH 4037 Florentine Quattrocento Wall Tombs 33:54
ARTH 4037 Antonio del Pollaiuolo (also Pollaiolo) 1:15:48

Jennifer A. Lewis, "3D Printing: Making the Future"


source: Harvard University    2016年8月31日
3D printing enables one to rapidly design and fabricate materials in arbitrary shapes on demand. I will introduce the fundamental principles that underpin 3D printing techniques. I will then describe how new functional and biological materials are vastly expanding the capabilities of 3D printing. Finally, I will highlight several emerging examples, including 3D printed electronics, lightweight composites, and vascularized tissue constructs, that demonstrate how this (still) nascent technology is being used to make the future.

From the Galaxy to Gaia


source: Cambridge University    2016年9月14日
Detailed information about more than a billion stars in the Milky Way has been published in the first data release from the Gaia satellite, which is conducting the first-ever ‘galactic census.’ The release marks the first chance astronomers and the public have had to get their hands on the most detailed map ever made of the sky.

The Humane Arts: On Leisure


source: Wes Cecil    2012年9月9日
A lecture that explores the importance of leisure as an element of artistic and scientific creativity. Part of the Humane Arts lecture series presented at Peninsula College by Wesley Cecil, Ph.D.
For information on upcoming lectures, essays, and books by Wesley Cecil Ph.D. go tohttp://www.facebook.com/HumaneArts

Race, Criminal Justice and Health | The Forum at HSPH


source: Harvard University    2015年2月11日
The focus on racial injustice in the US – particularly the effect of race on criminal justice – has been in the public spotlight following the tragic deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Eric Garner on Staten Island, and Tamir Rice in Cleveland during encounters with law enforcement. While these inequities play out in numerous areas, health and well-being is one sector in which minority groups are dramatically and disproportionally affected. This Forum event examined how disparities within the law and the criminal justice system negatively affect health in members of minority groups — as well as how the role of race interacts with neighborhood environments, educational and employment opportunities, public policy, and other factors to lead to poorer health in minority populations.
This event was presented February 6, 2015 in Collaboration with Reuters.
Watch the entire series from The Forum at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health at www.ForumHSPH.org.

Rashid Khalidi on "Unhealed Wounds of World War I: Armenia, Kurdistan, and Palestine"


source: Harvard University    2014年11月20日
Homi Bhabha
Director, Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard University
Harry Parsekian
President, Friends of Hrant Dink - Boston
Cemal Kafadar
Vehbi Koç Professor of Turkish Studies, Harvard University
Rakel Dink
Hrant Dink Foundation – Istanbul
Translation by Ayse Kadioglu
Dean of Faculty of Arts and Social Science, Sabanci University

Speaker
Rashid Khalidi
Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies, Columbia University

Cyberchondria: Do Online Health Searches Prompt Symptoms (and Worse)? | Mary Aiken


source: Big Think    2016年9月1日
1% of all Google searches are health queries. Cyberpsychologist Mary Aiken explains how artificial intelligence diagnostics lead to psychosomatic symptoms, and potentially explain the fourfold increase in iatrogenic death in the US since 1999. Aiken's book is "The Cyber Effect: A Pioneering Cyberpsychologist Explains How Human Behavior Changes Online" (http://goo.gl/A3qbwb).
Read more at BigThink.com: http://bigthink.com/videos/mary-aiken...

Transcript - I’m sure everybody knows somebody who searches health related information online. Well there’s actually a name for it and it’s called cyberchondria. Cyberchondria is defined as anxiety induced by escalation during online search to review morbid or serious content. So what does this mean? Well it means that you have a headache and you end up reading about brain tumor. And there’s a very good reason behind it. Humans have a propensity to escalate, to review the worst possible scenario probably to dismiss it. So come back to the headache. If you went to your doctor and you said I have a terrible headache and your doctor said well, you could have anything from a hangover to a brain tumor. You would say oh my goodness, talk to me about the brain tumor. And essentially that’s what happens online. People click on the worst case scenario and therefore those scenarios get driven up the search rankings. So the point about search it’s based on a frequency model, things that are frequently clicked are those things that actually rise to the top of search results. That’s fine if you’re looking at best beach in Florida but when it comes to health related matters it’s problematic. Why? Because it causes anxiety and you could be perfectly well but end up with a nasty case of health anxiety as a result of search. Read Full Transcript Here: http://goo.gl/sV5N3Z.