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  In the Spotlight | Events | Location | Experiential Technologies Center | Institute for Digital Research & Education

 

UCLA's Visualization Portal Transcends Time and Space

Photo: Roman Forum

Portal Sampler (video)

A 40-seat theater with up-to-date virtual reality technologies located on the 5th floor of the Math Science Building, the facility is literally a portal into other times, places, and experiences. The Portal is used for both instruction and research, and has particular foci on Historical Architectural Monuments, Scientific Visualizations and Digital Technologies for the Performance Arts. Research being worked on in the Portal spans the arts, sciences, humanities, urban planning projects, and medicine. Seventy classes were held in the Portal last year, which translated to 1,226 UCLA students experiencing art, history and science through virtual reality models and scientific visualizations. In addition, seven students have used the Portal and Modeling Lab to work on or defend their dissertations.

ATS provides the technology infrastructure and programming support for these projects. The Experiential Technologies Center (ETC) oversees projects involving modeling and historic reconstructions. The Institute for Digital Research and Education (IDRE) oversees projects in scientific visualization and computational simulation. Through partnerships with centers and institutes, Academic Technology Services is able to assure that projects are successful and maintain a high degree of scholarly integrity.

Visitors to the Portal

More than 4,000 people visit the Visualization Portal each year. That includes UCLA researchers who go there to work in their disciplines or to present their work to other scholars, university professors who bring their students to get a first-hand look at art and science that they’d otherwise only read about in books, applications developers who work to advance the capabilities of the virtual reality applications and the digital media being used in the Portal, potential grantors, potential UCLA faculty and graduate students, and about 600 students from area K-12 schools.

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Historical Architectural Monuments

Photo: Historical Architectural MonumentsA real-time tour of the Coliseum has helped more than one visitor imagine the rage and panic of animal and man as they were pushed out into the fighting ground Ancient Rome. And visitors can almost catch the smell of musk and candle wax as they conjure up the worshippers of Santa Maria Maggiore lighting their candles and praying to the Madonna. It’s easy for visitors to feel they’re wandering the streets of Port Royal as Captain Morgan goes looking for rum, and almost everyone is touched by the sweet high voices coming from St. James Cathedral in Santiago de Compostela.

The historical architectural models shown in the Portal are an experiment in using virtual reality to recreate a place and time that no longer exist. Used both for research and instruction, there are currently 42 models under development to improve the understanding of the original historical site and to develop new applications that will ultimately heighten the research and instruction experiences.

Read about:

Santiago de Compostela
Roman Forum

 

Scientific Visualization

Scientific VisualizationThe Visualization Portal is not just about architectural models that allow visitors to wander back in time a thousand years or more. The Visualization Program at Academic Technology Services was designed to help researchers comprehend vast amounts of data – usually the results of simulations. ATS consultants work with faculty researchers to create visualizations.

Virtual reality models have been created from simulations of the creation of the universe, weather models, cloud data, laser beams acting on plasmas, and antibodies. These models can be explored both spatially and temporally in the Portal. Numerous movies have also been created from scientific data that take advantage of the large display space the Portal screen provides.

Read about:

The Universe
Atmospheric Sciences and Sound
Heart in Fibrillation

 

Digital Technologies for the Performance Arts

Photo: Digital Technologies for the Performance Arts The Portal is also a venue where artists and performers can create innovative projects that rely on digital technologies. In the past two years, the Portal has been used for the development and presentation of projects that allow performers to simultaneously work with colleagues around the world and a project that created “bucky balls” – the nickname given to hollow, sphere-shaped carbon molecules reminiscent of architect R. Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic dome.

Read about:

bucky balls
Dancing in Digital Space
CyberSimps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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