Vision is one of the primary human senses and the ‘distance
sense’ par excellence, while visual communication is one of the
main forms of human communication along with language. Instances of
visual media are to be found everywhere we look. Examples of visual
media include static images (e.g., drawings and photographs),
moving images (e.g., film and television), and a variety of ‘new
media’ and associated platforms (e.g., the internet, iPhones,
computer games, and virtual reality). In a business and society
context, meanwhile, advertising and marketing can be thought of,
first and foremost, as exercises in competing for the visual
attention of the user or consumer.
Despite the prevalence of the visual in everyday life, visual
communication often does not receive the attention that it
deserves. One of the reasons for this is that purely visual images
lack the symbolic and syntactic devices typically associated with
language. As a result, images are less suited to making explicit
propositional statements, less assessable in terms of truth and
falsity, less easy to legislate for in legal and ethical terms, and
less conducive to understanding in general. Research suggests,
however, that the human visual system is intimately connected – in
both functional and neurobiological terms – to the psychological
systems responsible for decision making, emotion, and numerous
other response tendencies.
The general objective of this elective course is to understand the
role of visual communication/media in everyday interactions, with a
particular focus on the perceptual, cognitive, and emotional
processes of the user/consumer. An additional objective is to
understand the role of visual communication/media in the
advertising and marketing of commercial products and political
ideas, from the perspective of both the manufacturer (the ‘sender’)
and the user/consumer (the ‘receiver’), again with a focus on
perceptual, cognitive, and emotional processes.
The first part of the course will give an overview of the basic
properties and functions of the human visual system, with reference
to research in both perceptual psychology and cognitive
neuroscience. It will also give an account of how the human visual
system relates to, and potentially impacts upon, the psychological
systems involved in decision making and emotion. In the second part
of the course, we will examine the fundamental properties of
visual communication, and how visual communication differs from
linguistic communication, with reference to work on visual literacy
and persuasion (e.g., Messaris, 1994, 1997), visual semiotics
(Sonesson, 1989), visual rhetoric (e.g., Scott, 1994), and visual
metaphor (e.g., Forceville, 1996).
The third part of the course will give an overview of the
basic characteristics and building blocks of different types of
visual media, including static images (e.g., drawings and
photographs) and moving images (e.g., film and television). For
example, the basic principles for constructing film sequences
(cinematography and editing) will be discussed. In the fourth and
final part of the course, we will consider how the above
(traditionally analogue) media have been employed and developed in
‘new’ (or digitally-based) media and associated platforms (e.g.,
the internet, iPhones, computer games, and virtual
reality).
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The following list of readings is preliminary and based on
monographs and edited anthologies. The final list of readings will
include specific book chapters and journal articles.
Understanding visual perception
Eysenck, M. W., & Keane, M. T. (2010). Cognitive
psychology: A student’s handbook (6th Ed.). Selected chapters.
Hove: Psychology Press.
Gazzaniga, M. S., Ivry, R. B., & Mangun, G. R. (2008).
Cognitive neuroscience: The biology of the mind (3rd Ed.).
Selected chapters. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
Visual literacy and persuasion
Messaris, P. (1994). Visual literacy: Image, mind, and
reality. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Messaris, P. (1997). Visual persuasion: The role of images in
advertising. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Visual semiotics, visual rhetoric, and visual
metaphor
Sonesson, G. (1989). Pictorial concepts: Inquiries into the
semiotic heritage and its relevance for the analysis of the visual
world. Lund: Lund University Press.
Scott, L. (1994). Images in advertising: The need for a theory of
visual rhetoric. Journal of Consumer Research,21, 252–273.
Forceville, C. (1996). Pictorial metaphor in advertising.
London: Routledge.
Communications research
J. Bryant, & D. Zillmann (Eds.) (1991). Responding to the
screen: Reception and reaction processes. Hillsdale, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Film and television
Anderson, J. D. (1996). The reality of illusion: An ecological
approach to cognitive film theory. Carbondale, IL: Southern
Illinois University Press.
C. Plantinga, & G. M. Smith (Eds.) (1999). Passionate
views: Film, cognition, and emotion. Baltimore, MD: Johns
Hopkins University Press.
Nannicelli, T., & Taberham, P. (Eds.) (2014). Cognitive
media theory. Routledge/AFI Film Reader. New York: Routledge.
New media
Siapera, E. (2012). Understanding new media. London: SAGE
Publications Ltd.
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