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Seeing Science: NSF Backs RISD Research
02/14/2012

Teaching Assistant Kyuha Shim MFA 12 DM presents his work during the EPSCoR-funded Experimental Data Visualization studio.
For the last year, a
consortium of nine Rhode Island colleges and universities – including RISD,
Brown and the University of Rhode Island (URI) – has been engaged in a joint,
multiyear project to investigate the impact of climate change on marine life.
The project, funded by a landmark $20-million grant from the National Science
Foundation (NSF), is part of a national effort known as the Experimental
Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, or EPSCoR.
At the heart of Rhode Island’s EPSCoR partnership are
important scientific questions: how rising ocean temperatures are affecting
coastal food webs, whether those temperatures will lead to an increase in marine
pathogens and how marine organisms are adapting to this environmental stress.
But underlying all of those is another critical question: How can EPSCoR
researchers – and the scientific community in general – better communicate complex
scientific ideas to the public in an age when science itself is considered suspect,
or advancing so rapidly that most non-scientists can’t grasp it?
That challenge, says Associate
Professor of Industrial Design Charlie Cannon, is essentially a design problem – one that artists
and designers are uniquely positioned to tackle, and one where RISD is now playing
a leading role as the only art and design school in the country selected to
participate in EPSCoR.
“As a stand-alone art and
design school, we are unique in this program,” says Cannon, who is co-principal
investigator of RISD’s EPSCoR initiative along with Furniture Design Professor John Dunnigan MFA 80 ID. “The fact that we are participating in efforts like these is
indicative of a growing recognition in the scientific community that there are
broader opportunities here, with the potential for real technological
developments and contributions in solving problems.”
So far RISD students have
participated in two of nine EPSCoR studios planned over the next five years,
working with Brown and URI scientists to find new ways to communicate scientific
information, visualize massive data sets and better understand how the approach
to discovery in the design studio can inform scientific discoveries in the lab.
Using Art to Map Science
The
Hypothesis Studio, a spring 2011
course led by Cannon and geographer and RISD Critic Marie Cieri, laid the groundwork for the partnership, with students
from Industrial Design, Landscape Architecture, Digital+Media and
Film/Animation/Video working with scientists to understand the research already
underway and stake out areas of collaboration. Experimental Data Visualization, a fall 2011 studio led by Assistant
Professor of Foundation Studies Shawn
Greenlee and Digital+Media Critic Kurt Ralske, focused on creating interactive computer programs to
map research data on gene expression in oysters responding to attacks from
viruses or other parasites.
Next month scientists at
URI will present one of those data visualization models at the annual
conference of the National Shellfisheries Association, an international organization of scientists, industry
and policymakers dedicated to better understanding, managing and protecting shellfish
resources.
“One important question we
want to address in the EPSCoR collaboration is: How can we make these research
questions and the findings that flow from them accessible to the broadest
possible audience?” says Cannon, who is presenting various RISD STEM to STEAM initiatives this month at the
2012 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. “That’s important, because doubts about climate
change and doubts about science in the public discourse are making
decision-making more difficult and more fraught.”
Borrowing a phrase from one
of his EPSCoR collaborators, Cannon describes the disconnect between science
research and the public as “the cocktail party problem.”
“You’re at a cocktail party
and someone asks, ‘What do you?’ And you answer, ‘I study plankton,’” Cannon
says. “And as soon as you say that the eyes roll back into their heads and they
move along, when in fact, every other breath we take is actually produced by
plankton and three-quarters of the world population indirectly relies on
plankton for the protein in their diet, which largely comes from seafood. I
think the public is much more likely to support this kind of work if they
understand what the work is about.”
related links:
RISD’s EPSCoR initiative
Rhode Island NSF EPSCoR partnership
tags: governmental,
Digital + Media,
Film-Animation-Video,
Foundation Studies,
faculty,
Furniture Design,
Industrial Design,
Landscape Architecture,
STEAM