Results for 'Museum visitor'

974 found
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  1.  36
    Understanding the Inarticulateness of Museum Visitors’ Experience of Paintings: A Phenomenological Study of Adult Non-Art Specialists.Cheung On Tam - 2008 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 8 (2):1-11.
    This paper is based on a study of museum visitors’ experience of paintings: in particular, the experience of adult non-art specialists. Phenomenology, a form of inquiry that seeks to articulate lived experience, provided the philosophical and methodological framework for the study. Descriptions and themes relating to the experience of paintings were generated from interviews conducted with eight participants. These themes were categorized into two major areas: the articulated aspects and the non-articulated aspects. The former refers to aspects that people (...)
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  2.  18
    Bridging Museum Mission to Visitors’ Experience: Activity, Meanings, Interactions, Technology.Annamaria Recupero, Alessandra Talamo, Stefano Triberti & Camilla Modesti - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:486454.
    In recent years, the contribution of various disciplines and professionals (i.e. from marketing, computer science, psychology and pedagogy) to museum management has encouraged the development of a new conception of museology. Specifically, psychology has affected the overall conception of museum and the visitors towards a more holistic vision of the museum experience as a complexity of memory, personal drives, group identity, meaning-making process, as well as leisure preferences. In this regard, psychological research contributes to advance the scientific (...)
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  3.  32
    The Art of Seeing: An Interpretation of the Aesthetic EncounterInsights: Museums Visitors Attitudes Expectations.Pat Villeneuve, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi & Rick E. Robinson - 1993 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 27 (1):120.
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  4.  13
    Visitors’ discursive responses to hegemonic and alternative museum narratives: a case study of Le Modèle Noir.Laura Hodsdon - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (4):401-417.
    ABSTRACT Recent reflection on the role of museums and galleries has focused on their socially situated nature; and that as a social construct, co-produced with its audiences, heritage is in part discursively constituted. This has included acknowledgement that the inherited discourse is hegemonic and exclusive of divergent narratives, leading to moves to create alternatives to contest it, which include temporary exhibitions. These provide a potentially democratic space for discursive incursions freed from the constraints of the permanent museum. But they (...)
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  5.  27
    How Visitors Relate to Museum Experiences: An Analysis of Positive and Negative Reactions.Carole Henry - 2000 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 34 (2):99.
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  6.  12
    A study on the learning experience of visitors of digital museums in STEAM education: From the perspective of visitors’ visual evaluation.Xin Zhang & Jieming Hu - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Public education in museums has the interdisciplinary nature of STEAM education contemporary learning. In the contemporary learning process of the public, digital museums can rely on mobile terminals to provide people with opportunities for mobile learning. Especially since the global outbreak of COVID-19, many offline museums have been forced to close their doors or impose restrictions. How to use digital museums to better carry out the learning experience of visitors is a problem worthy of attention. Effective dissemination of visual information (...)
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  7. The relationship between visitor characteristics and learning‐associated behaviors in a science museum discovery space.Dorothy Lozowski Boisvert & Brenda Jochums Slez - 1994 - Science Education 78 (2):137-148.
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  8. Testing a museum exhibition design assumption: Effect of explicit labeling of exhibit clusters on visitor concept development.John H. Falk - 1997 - Science Education 81 (6):679-687.
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  9.  17
    Aesthetic Attributes of Museum Environmental Experience: A Pilot Study With Children as Visitors.Claudia Annechini, Elisa Menardo, Rob Hall & Margherita Pasini - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  10. How Museums Make Us Feel: Affective Niche Construction and the Museum of Non-Objective Painting.Jussi A. Saarinen - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (4):543-558.
    Art museums are built to elicit a wide variety of feelings, emotions, and moods from their visitors. While these effects are primarily achieved through the artworks on display, museums commonly deploy numerous other affect-inducing resources as well, including architectural solutions, audio guides, lighting fixtures, and informational texts. Art museums can thus be regarded as spaces that are designed to influence affective experiencing through multiple structures and mechanisms. At face value, this may seem like a somewhat self-evident and trivial statement to (...)
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  11.  34
    Ashmolean Museum: Guide to the Greek, Roman, and Chinese Coins. Pp. 51; frontispiece, 9 plates.Oxford: printed for the Visitors of the Museum, 1948. Paper, 2 s. 6 d. net. [REVIEW]G. K. Jenkins - 1949 - The Classical Review 63 (3-4):144-144.
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  12. Your Granny had one of those! How visitors use museum collections'.C. Johnstone - 1998 - In John Arnold, Kate Davies & Simon Ditchfield (eds.), History and heritage: consuming the past in contemporary culture. Donhead St. Mary, Shaftesbury: Donhead.
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  13. Seeing tornado: How video traces mediate visitor understandings of (natural?) phenomena in a science museum.Reed Stevens & Rogers Hall - 1997 - Science Education 81 (6):735-747.
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  14. Time-based behaviors at an interactive science museum: Exploring the differences between weekday/weekend and family/nonfamily visitors.Cody Sandifer - 1997 - Science Education 81 (6):689-701.
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  15.  4
    Enhancing Educational Experiences in Museums through Ethnic Cultural Exhibitions.Vibhor Mahajan, Kuthalingam Venkadeshwaran, Udita Goyal, Dr Bijal Shah, Bharat Bhushan, Usha Kiran Barla & Dr Poonam Singh - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:963-971.
    Museums are essential for improving cultural understanding and instruction. Exhibitions showcasing ethnic cultures provide insightful perspectives on many cultures and civilizations. These educational opportunities can be made as effective as possible by assessing their influence on visitor satisfaction.Investigation into the impact of ethnic culture exhibitions on audience pleasure, participation, and comprehension is lacking, despite their significance. By investigating how these displays affect visitors' knowledge acquisition and participation, the study seeks to close this disparity.Utilizing a combined methods technique that integrated (...)
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  16.  15
    “Science in action”: The politics of hands-on display at the New York Museum of Science and Industry.Jaume Sastre-Juan - 2021 - History of Science 59 (2):155-178.
    This article analyzes the changing politics of hands-on display at the New York Museum of Science and Industry by following its urban deambulation within Midtown Manhattan, which went hand in hand with sharp shifts in promoters, narrative, and exhibition techniques. The museum was inaugurated in 1927 as the Museum of the Peaceful Arts on the 7th and 8th floors of the Scientific American Building. It changed its name in 1930 to the New York Museum of Science (...)
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  17.  35
    Museums and their Paradoxes.Mark O'Neill - 2016 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 79:13-34.
    This chapter is written from the perspective of a practitioner and explores a range of paradoxes in museums and in the museological literature which may serve as starting points for conversations with philosophers. These include questions of definition and mission, intrinsic versus instrumental value, whether museums actively shape society or serve as a passive reflection, whether their main function is to produce liberating knowledge or express communal identities, whether traditional or progressive museums are the most ‘traditional’, whether museums are trying (...)
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  18. Museum as Process.Carol S. Jeffers - 2003 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 37 (1):107.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 37.1 (2003) 107-119 [Access article in PDF] Museum as Process Carol S. Jeffers Introduction Today's art museums are committed to completing major expansion and renovation projects, and vigorously carrying out their stated missions. 1 These missions typically are concerned with processes of acquisition, preservation, exhibition, and education. The National Gallery of Art, for example, is dedicated to "preserving, collecting, exhibiting, and fostering the (...)
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  19.  5
    Time and the Museum: Literature, Phenomenology, and the Production of Radical Temporality.Jen Walklate - 2022 - Routledge.
    "Time and the Museum: Literature, Phenomenology, and the Production of Radical Temporality, is the first explicit in-depth study of the nature of museum temporality. It argues as its departure point that the way in which museums have hitherto been understood as temporal in the scholarship - as spaces of death, othering, memory and history - is too simplistic, and has resulted in museum temporality being reduced to a strange heterotopia (Foucault) - something peculiar, and thus black boxed. (...)
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  20.  14
    Guidebooks, Museum Catalogues and the Growth of Public Interest in Painting in Italy, Germany and France.Charles Hope - 2020 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 83 (1):131-159.
    The article is an overview of the growth of an interest in painting, from the mid-sixteenth to the mid-nineteenth century, among a public not much involved in either the production or purchase of works of art. For the earlier period the main evidence is provided by guidebooks and other publications of a more general type, especially in Italy, which often incorporated the names of leading artists, but seldom provided information about their careers or where their works could be seen. This (...)
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  21.  7
    Educational resources of the museum "Losev's House" and their use in teaching philosophy.Якушкина Н.В Саенко Н.Р. - 2024 - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal) 6:227-235.
    The subject of the article, which is based on the concept and practical methodology of using the space of the museum exposition as an educational one, is the activities of the Moscow Memorial Museum "Losev's House". Particular attention is paid to the analysis of such educational resources of a new type offered by the Losev House as the Scientific Library, Online Lecture and Study Day at the Museum; within the framework of each of these forms, its general (...)
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  22.  60
    Main street as art museum: Metaphor and teaching strategies.Elizabeth Vallance - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (2):25-38.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Main Street as Art Museum:Metaphor and Teaching StrategiesElizabeth (Beau) Vallance (bio)In truth, walking down Main Street in many American small towns today is rather like walking through an art museum whose walls have mysterious gaps where paintings have been removed for cleaning. Maybe more accurately, walking down Main Street can be rather like walking through the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston after a Vermeer, two (...)
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  23.  59
    Trauma Site Museums and Politics of Memory.Patrizia Violi - 2012 - Theory, Culture and Society 29 (1):36-75.
    This article aims to analyse one specific type of memorial site that furnishes an indexical link to past traumatic events which took place in precisely these places. Such memorials will be defined here as trauma sites. It will be shown how the semiotic trait of indexicality produces unique meaning effects, forcing a reframing of the issue of representation, with all its aesthetic and ethical dimensions. In contrast to other forms of memorial site, trauma sites exist factually as material testimonies of (...)
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  24.  14
    Black Museum and Righting Wrongs.Gregory L. Bock, Jeffrey L. Bock & Kora Smith - 2020 - In William Irwin & David Kyle Johnson (eds.), Black Mirror and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 187–195.
    In Black Museum, a young woman is out to take revenge on the man who imprisoned her father's digital self in a museum exhibit that allows sadistic visitors to reenact his execution. While the exhibit is morally detestable and some may think that the museum's curator gets what he deserves in the end, the woman's act of vengeance is morally disturbing. This chapter explores Martha Nussbaum's account of anger and forgiveness and considers Christian and Buddhist teachings. An (...)
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  25.  41
    Learning ethics from museum exhibitions: Possible or impossible?Ching-Yuan Huang & Lichun Chiang - 2007 - Ethics and Behavior 17 (4):367 – 386.
    This research was undertaken to explore audience members learning ethics from two national museum exhibitions: The Return of Sherlock Holmes (RSH) and Human Body Exploration (HBE) in Taiwan. Based on literature review of ethics for museums, there are four dimensions related to exhibition ethics: environment, marketing, education, and services. Therefore, the purpose of this research was to examine the relationships within the dimensions of environment, marketing, education, and services of exhibition ethics and to understand the differences in exhibition ethics (...)
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  26. Museum education and the project of interpretation in the twenty-first century.Rika Burnham & Elliott Kai-Kee - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (2):11-13.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Museum Education and the Project of Interpretation in the Twenty-First CenturyRika Burnham and Elliott Kai-KeeThis is what we shall look for as we move: freedom developed by human beings who have acted to make a space for themselves in the presence of others, human beings become "challengers" ready for alternatives, alternatives that include caring and community. And we shall seek, as we go, implications for emancipatory education conducted (...)
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  27.  38
    Glass-boxing Science: Laboratory Work on Display in Museums.Caitlin Donahue Wylie - 2020 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 45 (4):618-635.
    Museum displays tend to black-box science, by displaying scientific facts without explanations of how those facts were made. A recent trend in exhibit design upends this omission by putting scientists, technicians, and volunteers to work in glass-walled laboratories, just a window away from visitors. How is science conceived, portrayed, and performed in glass-walled laboratories? Interviews and participant observation in several “fishbowl” paleontology laboratories reveal that glass walls alter lab workers’ typical tasks and behavior. However, despite glass-walled labs’ incomplete and (...)
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  28.  25
    Moving gender: Home museums and the construction of their inhabitants.Irit Dekel & Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi - 2019 - European Journal of Women's Studies 26 (3):274-292.
    Home museums in Israel and Germany produce a representational space in which the public figure, usually a ‘great man,’ is effectively ‘dragged home’ to the so-called private sphere so as to make the domestic worthy of musealization. Based on three years of ethnographic research in nine such museums, this article shows that when the sphere most identified with women is represented through the life and work of the men who lived there, the place of the wife and children is sidelined, (...)
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  29. Objects and the Museum.Samuel J. M. M. Alberti - 2005 - Isis 96 (4):559-571.
    This survey outlines a history of museums written through biographies of objects in their collections. First, the mechanics of the movement of things and the accompanying shifts in status are considered, from manufacture or growth through collecting and exchange to the museum. Objects gathered meanings through associations with people they encountered on their way to the collection, thus linking the history of museums to broader scientific and civic cultures. Next, the essay addresses the use of items once they joined (...)
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  30.  30
    The Contemporary Aristotelian Museum: Exploring the Museum as a Site of MacIntyre's Tradition‐constituted Enquiry.Jenifer Booth - 2007 - Journal for Cultural Research 11 (2):141-159.
    The connection is made between the Royal Museum of Scotland and encyclopaedia, one of MacIntyre's three rival versions of moral enquiry. It is then asked how MacIntyre's other two methods, genealogy and tradition‐constituted enquiry, would function within a museum. It is proposed that the museum fulfils Haldane's criterion for tradition‐constituted enquiry in that it combines the immanence and open‐endedness of the methods of enquiry with transcendence in the objects of enquiry. The ethical judgments of the visitors constitute (...)
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  31. Openness, Priority, and Free Museums.Jack Hume - forthcoming - Journal of Applied Philosophy.
    This article develops a fairness-based criticism of the UK’s policy of promoting free admissions at major museums. With a focus on geographic inequalities and per-capita museums spending, I argue that free admissions can be a surprisingly bad way of promoting cultural opportunities for disadvantaged groups. My criticism emphasises the fact that free admissions consume resources without necessarily providing targeted benefits to disadvantaged groups and addressing background inequalities. Given that museums vary in their location, visitor profile, and operating costs, this (...)
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  32.  32
    ‘A Sudden Surprise of the Soul’: Wonder in Museums and Early Modern Philosophy.Beth Lord - 2016 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 79:95-116.
    Recent museum practice has seen a return to ‘wonder’ as a governing principle for display and visitor engagement. Wonder has long been a contentious topic in aesthetics, literary studies, and philosophy of religion, but its adoption in the museum world has been predominantly uncritical. Here I will suggest that museums draw on a concept of wonder that is largely unchanged from seventeenth-century philosophy, yet without taking account of early modern doubts about wonder's efficacy for knowledge. In this (...)
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  33.  21
    How binding and bonding communicate interpersonal meanings in a children’s museum to address Jordan’s energy and water challenges.Ahmad El-Sharif - 2023 - Semiotica 2023 (250):43-66.
    Museums’ structures, spaces, and exhibits are understood as semiotic resources that make spatial texts that communicate a discourse defined by the authorities of the museum or its curators. The current study follows a social-semiotic approach in analyzing the spatial discourse of the Children’s Museum in Amman. It demonstrates that interpersonal meanings are semiotically communicated to children visitors in the Museum by firstly establishing a “comfort-zone” and secondly by aligning children visitors into groups with shared qualities, attitudes, and (...)
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  34.  21
    Innovative Niche Scientists: Women's Role in Reframing North American Museums, 1880-1930.Sally Gregory Kohlstedt - 2013 - Centaurus 55 (2):153-174.
    Women educators played an essential role in transforming public museums that had been focused on collections and research into effective educational and informational sites that engaged broad publics. Three significant innovators were Delia Griffin of St. Johnsbury Museum in Vermont who emphasized hands-on learning, Anna Billings Gallup who shaped a distinctive model museum for children in Brooklyn and Laura Bragg of the Charleston Museum who established strong collaboration with the local public schools. Joining museum curatorial staffs (...)
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  35.  54
    When little girls become junior connoisseurs: A cautionary tale of art museum education in the hyperreal.Melinda M. Mayer - 2006 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 40 (3):48-58.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:When Little Girls Become Junior Connoisseurs:A Cautionary Tale of Art Museum Education in the HyperrealMelinda M. Mayer (bio)Introducing the TaleA young girl about eleven years old appeared on the TV screen. She stood in an art museum expounding upon the painting hanging behind her. She talked about the artist and what the image portrayed. With an air of elitist prissiness that suited the museum environment, the (...)
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  36.  22
    In Defense of Art Museum Audio Guides.Antony Aumann - 2024 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 58 (2):43-63.
    This article aims to defend the value of art museum audio guides. Modern guides have many functions, but I will focus on two that pertain directly to art appreciation. First, audio guides offer tours that direct visitors' attention to museum highlights. Second, they have individual stops that offer commentary and criticism about individual works of art. I will concede that the tours do not serve the interests of all visitors. However, I will defend the merits of the individual (...)
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  37.  13
    ‘My Holocaust experience was great!’: Entitlements for participation in museum media.Chaim Noy - 2016 - Discourse and Communication 10 (3):274-290.
    This interdisciplinary study brings together research on audiences’ participation in the media, and an up-close exploration of communicative entitlement of and for such participation. Viewing visitor books as situated, public media, the study asks two related questions: how museums and institutions that employ this medium frame participation of ‘ordinary’ people in the public sphere, and how, in return, visitors variously articulate their participation. The article first examines the context in which visitor books mediate participation, and how museums frame (...)
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  38.  34
    Medicalization of the Post-Museum: Interactivity and Diagnosis at the Brain and Cognition Exhibit.David R. Gruber - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (1):65-80.
    The introduction of digital games and simulations into science museums has prompted excitement about a new "post-museum" pedagogy emphasizing egalitarianism, interactivity, and personalized approaches to learning. However, many post-museums of science, this article aims to show, enact rhetorical performances that lead visitors to narrowly targeted answers and hide the authority of the expert in a play of tactile and affective activities, thus operating in opposition to many of the basic ideals of the post-museum. The Brain and Cognition Exhibit (...)
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  39.  34
    The Taipai, Taiwan, Museum of World Religions.Maria Reis Habito - 2002 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 22 (1):203-205.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Buddhist-Christian Studies 22 (2002) 203-205 [Access article in PDF] The Taipai, Taiwan, Museum of World Religions Maria Reis Habito Dallas, Texas A new museum dedicated to exploring the world's great religious traditions opened in Taipei this past November. Its professed mission is rather unique: to teach about religions and religious life in the world, and to provide instructive experiences about the variety of the world's religious expressions (...)
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  40.  48
    Vulnerability as a Key Concept in Museum Pedagogy on Difficult Matters.Katrine Tinning - 2017 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 37 (2):147-165.
    In recent years there has been an increasing interest in museum studies in exhibitions on what is termed Difficult Matters —such as rape and mass murder—and how such exhibitions may evoke ethical change. This raises the question about the conditions on which such exhibitions can lead to an ethical change. By developing a conceptual framework this article contributes to museum studies on Difficult Matters demonstrating how vulnerability can work as a key concept in a relational pedagogical understanding of (...)
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  41.  65
    Bringing Dinosaurs Back to Life: Exhibiting Prehistory at the American Museum of Natural History.Lukas Rieppel - 2012 - Isis 103 (3):460-490.
    ABSTRACT This essay examines the exhibition of dinosaurs at the American Museum of Natural History during the first two decades of the twentieth century. Dinosaurs provide an especially illuminating lens through which to view the history of museum display practices for two reasons: they made for remarkably spectacular exhibits; and they rested on contested theories about the anatomy, life history, and behavior of long-extinct animals to which curators had no direct observational access. The American Museum sought to (...)
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  42.  21
    Children’s Gender Stereotypes in STEM Following a One-Shot Growth Mindset Intervention in a Science Museum.Fidelia Law, Luke McGuire, Mark Winterbottom & Adam Rutland - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Women are drastically underrepresented in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics and this underrepresentation has been linked to gender stereotypes and ability related beliefs. One way to remedy this may be to challenge male bias gender stereotypes around STEM by cultivating equitable beliefs that both female and male can excel in STEM. The present study implemented a growth mindset intervention to promote children’s incremental ability beliefs and investigate the relation between the intervention and children’s gender stereotypes in an informal science learning (...)
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  43.  62
    Questionnaire-based social research on opinions of Japanese visitors for communication robots at an exhibition.Tatsuya Nomura, Takugo Tasaki, Takayuki Kanda, Masahiro Shiomi, Hiroshi Ishiguro & Norihiro Hagita - 2007 - AI and Society 21 (1-2):167-183.
    This paper reports the results of questionnaire-based research conducted at an exhibition of interactive humanoid robots that was held at the Osaka Science Museum, Japan. The aim of this exhibition was to investigate the feasibility of communication robots connected to a ubiquitous sensor network, under the assumption that these robots will be practically used in daily life in the not-so-distant future. More than 90,000 people visited the exhibition. A questionnaire was given to the visitors to explore their opinions of (...)
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  44.  45
    Memorialization of Challenging Topics: Artists’ Interventions as Examples of Museum Practice.Irina Hasnaş-Hubbard - 2015 - History of Communism in Europe 6:91-112.
    Challenging topics in museums can guide museum professionals in developing modern methods of displaying their heritage, but also in offering reinterpretations of existing collections. The public also looks for challenging topics—injustice, loss, pain, or death—and many museums manage to attract visitors by offering them places to debate, reflect, or take action. These topics, if presented in an exhibition, could engage practising artists in an ideological exchange with the museum institution. Our statement is that artists with curatorial interest can (...)
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  45.  50
    Sharing Perspectives: Inviting Playful Curiosity Into Museum Spaces Through a Performative Score.Andreas Løppenthin, Dorte Bjerre Jensen, Cordula Vesper, Andreas Roepstorff & Joseph Dumit - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    We report on the performative score “Sharing Perspectives” from the art/science research collaboration, Experimenting, Experiencing, Reflecting. Sharing Perspectives is developed as a score, inspired by choreography and the postmodern dance form Contact Improvisation, to stage exploration and improvisation, exploring uncertainty, creativity, togetherness, and the relationship between bodies and between bodies and space and artworks. The SP score acts as an experiment in how a brief intervention may affect the way art exhibitions are experienced, exploring how deeper and more sensorial engagement (...)
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  46.  26
    (1 other version)Sociologie de la démocratisation des musées.Jacqueline Eidelman & Anne Jonchery - 2011 - Hermès: La Revue Cognition, communication, politique 61 (3):, [ p.].
    Les nombreuses études de publics réalisées dans les musées et les expositions depuis un quart de siècle en France mettent en évidence une institution muséale aussi plurielle que ses publics. Elles montrent comment les caractéristiques de la visite se sont transformées, qu’il s’agisse du contexte, de l’organisation, de la nature de l’expérience de visite ou de son usage après coup. Elles relativisent également la thèse d’une reproduction sociale mécanique de l’intérêt pour les musées et par là même de la nature (...)
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  47. Chornobyl as an Open Air Museum: A Polysemic Exploration of Power and Inner Self.Olga Bertelsen - 2018 - Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal 5:1-36.
    This study focuses on nuclear tourism, which flourished a decade ago in the Exclusion Zone, a regimented area around the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant (Ukraine) established in 1986, where the largest recorded nuclear explosion in human history occurred. The mass pilgrimage movement transformed the place into an open air museum, a space that preserves the remnants of Soviet culture, revealing human tragedies of displacement and deaths, and the nature of state nuclear power. This study examines the impact of the (...)
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  48.  16
    What Dwells There?Olivia Maria Gomes da Cunha - 2024 - Journal of World Philosophies 8 (2).
    Museum visitors partake in the effect of what we can call the domestication of the view. They witness the constant changes in how objects are allowed to exist in a museological space. In this way, visitors are challenged to cultivate new sensibilities that simultaneously reveal and conceal things and their relationships. These meanings have been subject to political debates, controversies, disputes, and conflicts around property rights involving museum representatives and other actors. As a result, the domesticated things inside (...)
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  49.  16
    Policy and impact of public museums in China : exploring new trends and challenges.Sofia Bollo & Yu Zhang - 2017 - Museum International 69 (3-4):26-37.
    In a commercialised and globalised China, museum institutions are pivotal elements in public strategies to present and create national self‐consciousness, insofar as their vast collections provide symbols of cultural identification on a national as well as an international level. This article will explore Chinese public museum policy and impact, firstly by describing the current status of the system as background information; secondly, by presenting the most recent trends in museum strategies and finally, by replacing the challenges and (...)
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    Health by design: teaching cleanliness and assembling hygiene at the nineteenth-century sanitation museum.Hilary Buxton - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Science 51 (3):457-485.
    In 1878, amid a rapidly proliferating social interest in public health and cleanliness, a group of sanitary scientists and reformers founded the Parkes Museum of Hygiene in central London. Dirt and contagion knew no social boundaries, and the Parkes's founders conceived of the museum as a dynamic space for all classes to better themselves and their environments. They promoted sanitary science through a variety of initiatives: exhibits of scientific, medical and architectural paraphernalia; product endorsements; and lectures and certificated (...)
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