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Portraits of Automated Facial Recognition : On Machinic Ways of Seeing the Face / Lila Lee-Morrison.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Image SerPublisher: Bielefeld : Transcript-Verlag, [2019]Copyright date: ©2019Description: 1 online resource (198 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 3839448468
  • 9783839448465
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification:
  • 006.3/7 23
LOC classification:
  • TA1653
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I: Aesthetics of an Algorithm -- Chapter 2: Eigenface -- Chapter 3: Francis Galton and the Composite Portrait -- Chapter 4: Wittgenstein and the Composite Portrait -- Part II: Artistic Interventions -- Chapter 5: Portraiture in the Age of AFR -- Chapter 6: Metaportraits: Thomas Ruff, andere Portraits -- Chapter 7: Faces in Excess: Zach Blas, Facial Weaponization Suite -- Chapter 8: An Algorithmic Ready-made: Trevor Paglen, Adversarially Evolved Hallucination and Eigenface (Even The Dead Are Not Safe) -- Chapter 9: Conclusion -- References -- List of Images
Summary: Through a critical perspective on visual culture studies, this book offers a unique analysis of the use of automated facial recognition algorithms as they increasingly intervene in society. The first part of this study traces the history of merging statistics and vision by reviewing the example of an early facial recognition algorithm called "eigenface", while the second part addresses contemporary artistic interventions including the work of Thomas Ruff, Zach Blas and Trevor Paglen. This book argues for a closer look at automated facial recognition based on an understanding of its technical processes as not only embedded in historical practices of visuality, but also as redefining what it means to see and be seen in the present.
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Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I: Aesthetics of an Algorithm -- Chapter 2: Eigenface -- Chapter 3: Francis Galton and the Composite Portrait -- Chapter 4: Wittgenstein and the Composite Portrait -- Part II: Artistic Interventions -- Chapter 5: Portraiture in the Age of AFR -- Chapter 6: Metaportraits: Thomas Ruff, andere Portraits -- Chapter 7: Faces in Excess: Zach Blas, Facial Weaponization Suite -- Chapter 8: An Algorithmic Ready-made: Trevor Paglen, Adversarially Evolved Hallucination and Eigenface (Even The Dead Are Not Safe) -- Chapter 9: Conclusion -- References -- List of Images

Through a critical perspective on visual culture studies, this book offers a unique analysis of the use of automated facial recognition algorithms as they increasingly intervene in society. The first part of this study traces the history of merging statistics and vision by reviewing the example of an early facial recognition algorithm called "eigenface", while the second part addresses contemporary artistic interventions including the work of Thomas Ruff, Zach Blas and Trevor Paglen. This book argues for a closer look at automated facial recognition based on an understanding of its technical processes as not only embedded in historical practices of visuality, but also as redefining what it means to see and be seen in the present.

In English.

Online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 21. Dez 2019).

Open Access EbpS

WorldCat record variable field(s) change: 072

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