Welcome! This is a website that everyone can build together. It's easy!

Visual Reasoning HomeThis is a featured page

Definition of visual reasoning

  • The so called "sense organs" are parts of the brain. Bodies are, in fact, perceptual brains.
  • Visual reasoning is an analytical method that employs human perception in order to communicate, problem solve and create.
  • Drawing is thinking, in the same way (though likely not through the same cognitive means?) writing is thinking.
  • According to evolutionary epistemology, biological adaptations are one form of knowledge, and science is another; both are produced by the processes of blind variation and selective retention (Campbell 1975 [in American Psychologist¸ 30, 1103-26]).

Uses of visual reasoning

  • Problem solving; examples include engineers who sketch a solution on the back of an envelope.
  • Visualizing the behavior of complex systems over time.
  • Metaphor.
  • Education, especially for interdisciplinary and critical studies

Neglect of visual reasoning

  • Visual reasoning is, well, visual; if there are different perceptual-epistemological domains -- different ways of knowing, as in visual and verbal -- then neglect of visual reasoning is a violation of civil rights.
  • One of the problems we've noticed is that visual reasoning appears to be dominated by engineers and architects. Even designers, who think visually for a living, rarely analyze what it is they do in ways that would enable others to use their techniques. Exceptions abound, of course; consider the example of Edward Tufte.
  • While scientists use visualization technologies (pencils, computers) all the time, rarely is the art of scientific visualization investigated scientifically. Rather, the knowledge that could contribute to a pedagogy of visual reasoning is locked in separate "silos," at best, or left completely untheorized (graphical skills are a talent). In other words, graphic artists may work for scientists but scientists rarely work for graphic artists--or the graphic arts.

The Perceptual Economy

  • We see things all the time we don't believe, and accept as truth images we know are lying.



funkendub
funkendub
Latest page update: made by funkendub , Nov 6 2008, 11:13 PM EST (about this update About This Update funkendub Edited by funkendub

16 words added

view changes

- complete history)
More Info: links to this page
Started By Thread Subject Replies Last Post
Anonymous Developing visual reasoning through Chinese brush painting 0 Jan 21 2009, 12:58 PM EST by Anonymous
 
Thread started: Jan 21 2009, 12:58 PM EST  Watch
I have learned through psychological testing that I have good visual reasoning skills. I believe that these are developed by attending Chinese Brush painting classes. The instruction to feel the 'chi' and use one or two strokes to convey the spirit of an animal or plan, whilst working methodically to produce elements of the landscape such as rocks, water, mountains I beleive supports the development of visual reasoning
Do you find this valuable?    

Anonymous  (Get credit for your thread)


Showing 1 of 1 threads for this page