DocumentCode
1390190
Title
Curious learning, cultural bias, and the learning curve
Author
Davenport, G.
Author_Institution
Media Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA
Volume
5
Issue
2
fYear
1998
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
19
Abstract
Today´s interactive installations are characterized by simplistic feedback mechanisms, limited underlying databases of content, and very little autonomous intelligence. Yet even these rudimentary systems provide great opportunities for curious learning, surprise, and serendipitous discovery. They also serve as a social nexus. The interpersonal, back-channel communications and ancillary activities of the audience, which currently remain largely unsensed and unprocessed, can be just as important as the primary authored experience. The key to accessing and communicating larger perceptions in the digital age may well lie in the collective social activities that occur within the context of shared narratives. The exchanges and experiences of group exploration and discovery, communal curious learning promises rewards far beyond the mere enjoyment of story and the instant gratifications of an individual´s remote control
Keywords
education; social aspects of automation; autonomous intelligence; back-channel communications; collective social activities; cultural bias; curious learning; databases; digital age; feedback mechanisms; group exploration; learning curve; social nexus; Bleaching; Collaborative work; Continuing education; Cultural differences; Digital cameras; Digital photography; Global communication; Minutes; Natural languages; Scholarships;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
MultiMedia, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1070-986X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/93.682521
Filename
682521
Link To Document