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VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of t...
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Chernoff, Michael.
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VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of the Video Screen.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of the Video Screen./
Author:
Chernoff, Michael.
Published:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2023,
Description:
55 p.
Notes:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 85-03.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International85-03.
Subject:
Multimedia communications. -
Online resource:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30573959
ISBN:
9798380349673
VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of the Video Screen.
Chernoff, Michael.
VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of the Video Screen.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2023 - 55 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 85-03.
Thesis (M.F.A.)--State University of New York at Buffalo, 2023.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
The question "what is video" depends on a variety of contexts in the way in which video technology is used. Video surveillance has been popularly defined by the presence of CCTV systems mounted to buildings which provide a "televisual" or long-distance view. Video surveillance is a remote observation of an object or environment; with a video camera and monitor whose separate connectivity removes an individual from an event so that they can observe without being observed. Yet, as video is implemented in newer technical applications, the scope of video surveillance also expands. The embedding of cameras in mobile devices, cars, and consumer electronics has enabled surveillance to be an up-close viewing of any physical activity. Even the video screen has become a de-privatized a space due to the virtual capturing of screen activity. Consequently, the interface of the video screen is no longer about a private subject (viewer) but is instead a space for surveilling interaction the subject. The multiplicities video cameras and screens become occupiers of real space. Video forms an occupation of space that I am calling a Videosphere. The Videosphere is a surveillance space meant to observe environments around and from within the screens and the cameras attached to them. This paper examines the medium of video and surveillance through a video art installation in the form of a video archaeological lab titled Videosphere: You Are Always On A Screen Somewhere... as a way of raising awareness of video surveillance as a physical apparatus of seemingly separate video devices with individual operations of video technology. The occupation of many surveillance cameras and monitors made the exhibition a totally surveilled performance space in which monitors and individuals appear on he screens of other monitors. This Videosphere inverted video surveillance by having cameras watch screens while the screens openly displayed surveillance camera feeds contained in the exhibition space. This inversion of video surveillance created a spectacle in which surveillance is rendered as a harmless attraction and the screen is no longer about private viewing for human subjects. The video screen is instead the site for visible interactions for video surveillance systems. Thus, in any space occupied by video, a person always appears on screen somewhere.
ISBN: 9798380349673Subjects--Topical Terms:
590562
Multimedia communications.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Surveillance apparatus
VIDEOSPHERE: Video Surveillance of the Video Screen.
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The question "what is video" depends on a variety of contexts in the way in which video technology is used. Video surveillance has been popularly defined by the presence of CCTV systems mounted to buildings which provide a "televisual" or long-distance view. Video surveillance is a remote observation of an object or environment; with a video camera and monitor whose separate connectivity removes an individual from an event so that they can observe without being observed. Yet, as video is implemented in newer technical applications, the scope of video surveillance also expands. The embedding of cameras in mobile devices, cars, and consumer electronics has enabled surveillance to be an up-close viewing of any physical activity. Even the video screen has become a de-privatized a space due to the virtual capturing of screen activity. Consequently, the interface of the video screen is no longer about a private subject (viewer) but is instead a space for surveilling interaction the subject. The multiplicities video cameras and screens become occupiers of real space. Video forms an occupation of space that I am calling a Videosphere. The Videosphere is a surveillance space meant to observe environments around and from within the screens and the cameras attached to them. This paper examines the medium of video and surveillance through a video art installation in the form of a video archaeological lab titled Videosphere: You Are Always On A Screen Somewhere... as a way of raising awareness of video surveillance as a physical apparatus of seemingly separate video devices with individual operations of video technology. The occupation of many surveillance cameras and monitors made the exhibition a totally surveilled performance space in which monitors and individuals appear on he screens of other monitors. This Videosphere inverted video surveillance by having cameras watch screens while the screens openly displayed surveillance camera feeds contained in the exhibition space. This inversion of video surveillance created a spectacle in which surveillance is rendered as a harmless attraction and the screen is no longer about private viewing for human subjects. The video screen is instead the site for visible interactions for video surveillance systems. Thus, in any space occupied by video, a person always appears on screen somewhere.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30573959
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