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Leonardo Vol. 36, Issue 4 (2003)
Leonardo is a print journal, published five times a year. Leonardo is edited by Leonardo/the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, and published by the MIT Press.
ONLINE ACCESS: Subscriptions to Leonardo include access to electronic versions of journal issues available on The MIT Press website.
ORDER: Subscriptions, individual issues and articles can also be ordered from The MIT Press.

[ See also the Tables of Contents and Abstracts of past issues of Leonardo and LMJ ]
Editorial
Aesthetic Computing Manifesto
by Paul Fishwick et al.
Abstracts
Visualizing Petri Nets in 3D
by Linda Dance with Paul Fishwick
An Investigation into the Use of Metaphor in the rube(TM) Paradigm
by Linda Dance with Paul Fishwick
The Leonardo Gallery
Complexity
Curated by Philip Galanter and Ellen K. Levy
work by Manuel A. Báez; Jonathan Callan; Remo Campopiano, Guy Marsden and Jonathan Schull; David Goldes; Hans Haacke; Brian Lytle; Steina and Woody Vasulka
Special Section: Global Crossings: The Cultural Roots of Globalization
The Spirit and Power of Water Project
Introduction: The Spirit and Power of Water: A Leonardo Virtual Africa Workshop
by Roger F. Malina
From "Life-Water" to "Death-Water" or On the Foundations of African Artistic Creation from Yesterday to
Tomorrow
by Iba Ndiaye Diadji
ABSTRACT: The question of water crosses all African cultures---water as the critical factor for a happy life (life-water) or water mastered as a source of malediction (death-water).
The aquatic nature of such a civilization appears then as the foundation of shapes and contents of African artistic expression. An analysis of various forms of creation shows that, without a
lucid understanding of the power of water in the constitution of Africa's identity, it is impossible to interpret correctly African art from yesterday to tomorrow.
Fragments of a Flow: A Thread of Water in Video Work
by Irit Batsry
Nommo---The Spirit of Water---in the Dogon World
by Jacky Bouju
Alma da Água: A Space Awareness Initiative
by Dinis Ribeiro and Richard Clar
Liquid Light: Working with Water
by Liliane Lijn
Music, Colors and Movements of Water
by Jacques Mandelbrojt and Lucie Prod'homme
The Symbolic Function of Water in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Cultural Approach
by Camille Talkeu Tounouga
Wave Rings
by Nodoka Ui
Memory of Water
by Camel Zekri and Dominique Chevaucher
Artist's Article
Decon2 (Decon Squared): Deconstructing Decontamination
by Steve Mann
ABSTRACT: Decon is short for decontamination (e.g. stripdown and washdown in response to anthrax scares, etc.), but the term "decon" is also a short form for "deconstruction"
(literary criticism asserting multiple conflicting interpretations of philosophical, political or social implications rather than an author's intention). The author describes an anthrax-ready
mailroom exhibit that included mass casualty decontamination showers, which he built in the summer of 2001, based on a patent he filed in April 2000, to deconstruct the coming
"war on terrorism" and the suspension of civil liberties and personal privacy that might follow in the wake of bioterror attacks.
General Article
Personal Profiles of Color Synesthesia: Developing a Testing Method for Artists and Scientists
by Crétien van Campen and Clara Froger
ABSTRACT: The authors describe a practical method for assessing personal profiles of color:word, color:taste, color:music and color:odor synesthesia. The Netherlands Color
Synesthesia (NeCoSyn) method is based on the Swedish Natural Color System and the test of genuineness for colored-word synesthesia developed by Baron-Cohen et al. The NeCoSyn method
has been tested scientifically and shown to reliably distinguish different types of color synesthesia. It provides individual profiles of color synesthesia in the dimensions of hue, chroma and
blackness. This article describes the method and discusses possible applications of NeCoSyn profiles in different fields of the arts and sciences.
Historical Perspective on the Arts, Sciences and Technology
Art, Optics and History: New Light on the Hockney Thesis
by Michael John Gorman
ABSTRACT: David Hockney's recent book Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters argues that 15th-century painters employed optical
devices to achieve realistic portraiture. A reexamination of the history of optical projection techniques raises problems for Hockney's provocative hypothesis.
Statements
The Orbital Poetry Engine
by Mac Dunlop and Neil Jenkins
Texts by Jean-Bernard Condat Retracted fromLeonardo because of Plagiarism
by Roger F. Malina
Spectroscopic Imaging in Art Conservation: A New Tool for Materials Investigations
by Michael Attas et al.
Special Section: Intersenses and New Technologies
Introduction
by Jacques Mandelbrojt
Sense and Intersensoriality
by François Delalande
ABSTRACT: Intersensoriality is part of the more general problem of musical meaning: How does sound relate to something outside of the world of sound? If we distinguish the "form" of
sound from its "matter," the discussion can then be divided into two parts. First, how can sound forms (shapes, profiles) suggest other temporal forms, such as movement? The hypothesis
developed here is that sensorimotor experience is generalized to furnish a base, in successive layers, for identifying suggested movements that are more and more abstract. Secondly, how
can a sound be said to be "hot" or "cold," "dark" or "clear"? Metaphors concerning the matter of sound deal with a common level of synesthesia; a few stages of the historical study of this
phenomenon are recalled here.
Motor-Mimetic Music Cognition
by Rolf Inge Godøy
ABSTRACT: Music appeals to more than just our sense of hearing, and clearly we often associate other sensations with music. These non-sonorous sensations seem to be inseparable from
the experience of music; in particular, images of movement appear to be deeply embedded in our perception and cognition of music. Explorations of mental images of music-related movement
could enhance our understanding of music as a phenomenon, as well as be of practical value in various music-making tasks.
Synesthesia: A Multimodal Combination of Senses
by Jean-Pierre Ternaux
ABSTRACT: Synesthesia is an unusual phenomenon that is occasionally reported in artists and writers. In its pathological context, synesthesia is described as a confusion of the senses
where the excitation of one sense triggers stimulation in a completely different sensory modality. In contrast to this pathological form, synesthesia can also be considered as a
physiological behavior that involves a multimodal combination of all senses. Such an expression of sensory perception can also be considered as a natural process that contributes to the
adaptation of the living organism to its environment. The author attempts to analyze the cerebral mechanisms involved in sensory perception and synesthesia.
Leonardo On-Line Bibliographies
Leonardo Reviews
Reviews by Fred Andersson, Wilfred Niels Arnold, Roy R. Behrens, Maia Engeli, Dene Grigar, Amy Ione, Michael R. Mosher, Angela Ndalianis,
Simone Osthoff, Robert Pepperell, David Topper, Stefaan Van Ryssen, Stephen Wilson.
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