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Green chairs, fictional phalluses, infiltration, and love on the rocks: Medical imaging artifacts blown up

Posted on:2009-03-05Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Central FloridaCandidate:Koller, LynnFull Text:PDF
GTID:1444390002991844Subject:Health Sciences
Abstract/Summary:
This text outlines and applies a methodology for deciphering problems and producing new information by analyzing the artifacts produced by medical imaging technologies---text and images---using practices gleaned from Surrealists, semiologists, and visual artists, emphasizing its own form as being the product of the apparatuses that produce it and therefore untrustworthy. Its basic assumption is that every text contains the information necessary to solve problems of all sorts, though because of the limitations of this text in both form and authorial intellect, we may only reach a starting point for a solution herein. In this regard, we are deciphering rather than solving. Further, this text illustrates primarily through narratives how digital imaging technologies mediate our relationship with our doctors, illnesses, and our bodies. It explores how the artifacts produced by medical imaging technologies create a data stream that replaces the corporal patient, shifting the physician's focus from the whole body to pieces and parts.;It is a study of texts and technologies. The method evolved from a rhetorical approach to examining the medical imaging artifacts and the processes by which those artifacts come into existence, with the method and form becoming part of the story, producing a wide array of new information that transcends disciplinary constraints.
Keywords/Search Tags:Artifacts, Medical imaging, Information, Text
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