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Data duality : When artistic and scientific research overlap

This chapter presents a case study of artistic data collection within a project at the intersection of opera, technology, and embodied cognition. The collaborative process in the research project First Person Singer provided an opportunity to examine how artistic and scientific practices can create shared spaces for mutual exchange. It demonstrates how a single dataset may simultaneously serve as

Analyzing the Comprehension and Awareness of Peptic Ulcer Disease and Its Risk Factors among the Jazan Population, Saudi Arabia

Background: Peptic ulcer disease (PUD) is characterized by an ulcer in the gastric or duodenal mucosa, approximately 3–5 mm deep. This global health concern significantly impacts health and quality of life, necessitating increased public awareness for the prevention and control of its risk factors. Materials and Methods: The study employed a cross-sectional online questionnaire targeting 400 adult

Editorial : Revisiting interdisciplinarity within collaborative sonic practice

Over the past two decades, collaboration has emerged as a keyword and an important methodological and ethical concern in various disciplines, which has nurtured interdisciplinary approaches that often encompass innovative processes of knowledge production. In sonic practice, trends such as participatory art, the workshop turn, and ideas of Do-It-With-Others contributed to the emergence of creative

Editorial : Computational tools and digital methods in creative practices

The plethora and availability of digital tools and practices have transformed the ways art is created, perceived and disseminated. This had a distinct impact on how research is conducted across the arts and humanities as a whole from practice-led to process-focused and people-centred research. Airea’s first issue “Computational tools and digital methods in creative practices” germinated from a ser

Digital interactions : Sound and three-dimensional forms

This article discusses a prototype that explores the simultaneous manipulation of three-dimensional digital forms and sound. Our multi-media study examines the aesthetic affordances of tight parameter couplings between digital three-dimensional objects and sound objects based on notions of process and user-machine interaction. It investigates how effective cohesion between visual, spatial and soni

Sonic Fictions : Shaping Collective Urban Imaginaries through Sound

Sound is a fundamental element of our relationship to others and to the world. Current environmental, sociopolitical, cultural, and economic dimensions of our society can be captured and studied through sound. This article investigates ways of listening to future versions of our cities. Sound’s role is explored in the transformation of spaces and communities based on a dialectic between sound art,

Sonic passages : Sound as a sensory instrument for urban design

Following the successful first Urban Sound Symposium held at Ghent University in 2019, the second edition in 2021 had to face the challenges of the pandemic. The symposium turned this challenge into an opportunity for giving easier access to practitioners and experts from around the globe who are confronted with urban sound in their professional activities. It was organized simultaneously in Ghent

Are pioneering coyotes, jackals and foxes alien species?: Canid colonists in the changing conservation landscape of the Anthropocene

The pervasive influence of human agency on biodiversity in the Anthropocene gives rise to several new challenges for national and international wildlife law, including questions regarding what is natural and what is alien. Ultimately, a new vision and new rules are called for but in the meantime wildlife lawyers and other conservation professionals must work with conventional legal frameworks. Str

What's Political about Political Refugeehood? A Normative Reappraisal

Abstract What is political about political refugeehood? Theorists have assumed that refugees are special because their specific predicament as those who are persecuted sets them aside from other “necessitous strangers.” Persecution is a special form of wrongful harm that marks the repudiation of a person's political membership and that cannot—contrary to certain other harms—be remedied where they

Two-tier EU citizenship : Disposable Eastern European workers during the COVID-19 pandemic

We argue that the (mis)treatment of Eastern European migrant workers during the pandemic revealed the existence of a two-tier EU citizenship, despite the political discourse of equality within the EU. We show that this two-tier citizenship system was generated by the combined effect of differentiated rights and of prejudicious practices applied to EE citizens. In terms of differentiated rights, we

Women’s experiences of sexuality during menopausal transition : An interview study

Objective Menopausal transition, brings significant changes to various aspects of health and well-being, including sexuality. These changes are influenced by hormonal changes, psychological factors, and societal perceptions. Historically, research on menopausal transition has predominantly focused on pharmacological treatments, to address symptoms. However, these studies often neglect the inclusio

Schíma – morphé – íchos : form, structure and playability across sound and sculpture

This presentation discusses material and performative aspects ofsound art through the combination of sculptural objects, soundsand a sensing system. Our work ‘Schíma – morphé – íchos’, offersitself up as a sound installation, a sculptural ensemble and a liveperformance where form, structure, playability and the backgroundsystem are brought together to identify new ways of composing,making and part

”… och från dem stammar sedan många läkare …” : Förutsättningar för läkekonst och kunnande i det medeltida Norden

The art of medicine in the semi-urban and poorly literate medieval Nordic countries was essentially a craft. Those skilled in medicine learned their profession by being apprenticed to people who were more experienced and knowledgeable. But unlike other crafts, such as that of the potter or the carpenter, one could not practice just any way. One could not start from scratch with one’s lump of clay

Policing bodies, protecting borders : Sexually transmitted diseases, gender, and military medicine in Japan’s wartime empire

This article examines a gendered reconfiguration in the Japanese empire’s approach to the control of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) during the Asia-Pacific War (1937–1945), tracing how state surveillance expanded from targeting women, especially sex workers and ‘comfort women’, to also encompass imperial soldiers as potential vectors of infection. This reallocation of scrutiny restructured t