UNC Asheville will gather artists, scientists
and tech geeks to connect this fall and explore new ways to present
scientific concepts to each other and the public using everything
from video games to immersive domes. The AppliedVis 2006 Symposium
will be held from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 10, at the Haynes
Conference and Technology Training Center on the A-B Tech Enka
Campus.
Applied visualization, a growing industry in
Western North Carolina, combines art and technology to communicate
science in a visual way. The AppliedVis 2006 Symposium will focus on
the interface of four major talent pools in the region: artists,
scientists, educators and techies. Speakers and panelists from these
groups will highlight the many applications for visualization, such
as educational tools and disaster response, which result in economic
development.
It is this interdisciplinary approach that put
applied visualization on Asheville’s radar screen. Building on the
2004 and the 2005 conferences, AppliedVis 2006 will focus on getting
this talent pool plugged into active projects. One new project with
many opportunities is the Renaissance Computing Initiative (RENCI)
Applied Visualization Lab at UNC Asheville. The lab has been
established to develop high-resolution, near real-time weather
models for disaster planning and response in our mountain region,
which has a long history of devastating floods and mudslides. The
project offers significant research opportunities to undergraduate
and graduate students in the fields of environmental studies,
computing, multimedia arts and sciences, education, geographical
information systems, and environmental economics. When completed,
the models will be put to use by city and county planners, emergency
responders, educators and others.
UNC Asheville’s National Environmental Modeling
and Analysis Center (NEMAC) will host the AppliedVis 2006 Symposium.
The symposium is sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency and co-sponsored by RENCI, Education & Research Services, UNC
Asheville’s Multimedia Arts & Sciences Department, Asheville’s Media
Arts Project, Meet the Geeks, the City of Asheville and Buncombe
County.
“The AppliedVis 2006 Symposium will be a live
network of scientists with concepts to share, artists interested in
using technology to tell stories, educators hungry for new ways to
reach their audience, and computer savvy entrepreneurs that can
bring it all together,” said Jim Fox, NEMAC’s director of
operations. “We are looking for this creative group of people to
discover innovative ways to work together and create new economic
opportunities here in Asheville.”
Registration is $10 or free to students and
faculty from UNC Asheville, A-B Tech and Warren Wilson. For more
information about the AppliedVis 2006 Symposium, click on
www.appliedvis.org or
contact Pamela McCown at 828/670-7873 or
pamela@education-research-services.org.