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<dc:title lang="es-ES">A web overlay on the City A new level of urban representation and visual experience</dc:title>
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<dc:subject lang="es-ES">Photo flows; visual sociology; urban imagery; place sentiment</dc:subject>
<dc:description lang="es-ES">IntroductionThe informational overload is not just new in our era. Since the 1980’s it has been forecast that information would have been not only a renewable material, but even a self-generating resource, in which the risk was drowning (Naisbitt, 1982). After more than 30 years we can say that such a prediction was correct or even underestimated. The terms “data mining” (Cabena et al., 1997) or “big data” (Mayer-Schönberger; Cukier, 2013) are nowadays part of our vocabulary and not only inside the academic environment. Inside this panorama the web-based turn of informational technology has a main role in implementing the amount of texts, notices, news, numbers, literatures, reports, narratives and so on. If we look at this process from the internet audience point of view we can detect important outcomes such as a widespread multimedia loudness as a permanent soundtrack of our lives. This pervasive influence of the techno-media could have deep effects on human psychology (De Kerckhove, 2000) which are still to be discussed. But among these complex sets of phenomena what is interesting, in the field of urban studies, is the overabundance of images and in particular of city images which are available in an incomparable dimension until short time ago. Showing an overlook of this new dimension of a visual-urban performance is just the aim of this paper. KeywordsPhoto flows; visual sociology; urban imagery; place sentiment</dc:description>
<dc:publisher lang="es-ES">Departamento de Urbanística y Ordenación del Territorio. ETSAM. Univ Politécnica de Madrid</dc:publisher>
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<dc:source lang="es-ES">Urban; Núm. 08-09 (2014): New Urban Languages; 171-184</dc:source>
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<subfield code="a">Introduction The informational overload is not just new in our era. Since the 1980’s it has been forecast that information would have been not only a renewable material, but even a self-generating resource, in which the risk was drowning (Naisbitt, 1982). After more than 30 years we can say that such a prediction was correct or even underestimated. The terms “data mining” (Cabena et al., 1997) or “big data” (Mayer-Schönberger; Cukier, 2013) are nowadays part of our vocabulary and not only inside the academic environment. Inside this panorama the web-based turn of informational technology has a main role in implementing the amount of texts, notices, news, numbers, literatures, reports, narratives and so on. If we look at this process from the internet audience point of view we can detect important outcomes such as a widespread multimedia loudness as a permanent soundtrack of our lives. This pervasive influence of the techno-media could have deep effects on human psychology (De Kerckhove, 2000) which are still to be discussed. But among these complex sets of phenomena what is interesting, in the field of urban studies, is the overabundance of images and in particular of city images which are available in an incomparable dimension until short time ago. Showing an overlook of this new dimension of a visual-urban performance is just the aim of this paper. Keywords Photo flows; visual sociology; urban imagery; place sentiment</subfield>
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<p>IntroductionThe informational overload is not just new in our era. Since the 1980’s it has been forecast that information would have been not only a renewable material, but even a self-generating resource, in which the risk was drowning (Naisbitt, 1982). After more than 30 years we can say that such a prediction was correct or even underestimated. The terms “data mining” (Cabena et al., 1997) or “big data” (Mayer-Schönberger; Cukier, 2013) are nowadays part of our vocabulary and not only inside the academic environment. Inside this panorama the web-based turn of informational technology has a main role in implementing the amount of texts, notices, news, numbers, literatures, reports, narratives and so on. If we look at this process from the internet audience point of view we can detect important outcomes such as a widespread multimedia loudness as a permanent soundtrack of our lives. This pervasive influence of the techno-media could have deep effects on human psychology (De Kerckhove, 2000) which are still to be discussed. But among these complex sets of phenomena what is interesting, in the field of urban studies, is the overabundance of images and in particular of city images which are available in an incomparable dimension until short time ago. Showing an overlook of this new dimension of a visual-urban performance is just the aim of this paper. KeywordsPhoto flows; visual sociology; urban imagery; place sentiment</p>
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<p>IntroductionThe informational overload is not just new in our era. Since the 1980’s it has been forecast that information would have been not only a renewable material, but even a self-generating resource, in which the risk was drowning (Naisbitt, 1982). After more than 30 years we can say that such a prediction was correct or even underestimated. The terms “data mining” (Cabena et al., 1997) or “big data” (Mayer-Schönberger; Cukier, 2013) are nowadays part of our vocabulary and not only inside the academic environment. Inside this panorama the web-based turn of informational technology has a main role in implementing the amount of texts, notices, news, numbers, literatures, reports, narratives and so on. If we look at this process from the internet audience point of view we can detect important outcomes such as a widespread multimedia loudness as a permanent soundtrack of our lives. This pervasive influence of the techno-media could have deep effects on human psychology (De Kerckhove, 2000) which are still to be discussed. But among these complex sets of phenomena what is interesting, in the field of urban studies, is the overabundance of images and in particular of city images which are available in an incomparable dimension until short time ago. Showing an overlook of this new dimension of a visual-urban performance is just the aim of this paper. KeywordsPhoto flows; visual sociology; urban imagery; place sentiment</p>
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<copyright>El copyright del texto y la edición será cedido por los autores a la Revista Urban del Departamento de Urbanística y Ordenación del Territorio (Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid - Universidad Politécnica de Madrid).Esta cesión se realizará mediante la firma y envío vía mail al Equipo Editorial del modelo de carta que se encuentra en la web de la revista.La revista permite el auto-archivo de la versión post-print (en su versión editorial) después de un periodo de 12 meses tras la publicación de la revista. La Revista Urban autoriza este auto-archivo en páginas web personales de los autores y repositorios institucionales y/o temáticos. Urban is an open access journal which means that all content is freely available without charge to the user or his/her institution. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles on this journal without asking prior permission from the publisher or the author. This is in accordance with the BOAI definition of open access. </copyright>
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