- Apr 2022
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hechingerreport.org hechingerreport.org
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Reading might mean listening to an audiobook or using a text-to-speech application.
Times were occasionally tough for aural people.
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- Mar 2018
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s18.pdarrington.net s18.pdarrington.net
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ltngu1stte, visual, aural, gestural, and spatial-which they found could be
In "Forty Years Later, the Golden Record Goes Vinyl" is an interesting article because it incorporates three of the five mutlimodal modes which are linguistic, visual, and aural. The Golden Record originally was not intended for human consumption but after several years later it was. The Golden Record was created in several different languages so that many people would be able to understand.
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There are 4 four requirements that must be met to successfully send a message to the future: • message must survive (durable) • message must be found (in plain sight) • message must be understood (build in a Rosetta stone) • message must be believed (so the message must be comprehensive enough for it to be judged as true)
Conca is showing that all forms of multimodal communication must be used to get the maximum effect for the maximum amount of time. The better organized it is for the reader to understand the message.
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The search for how to utter a crucial message through time involves many scholarly disciplines, including semiotics (the study of signs), linguistics, history and anthropology. This last one is tricky. King Tut got it really wrong - both tomb raiders and archeologists didn’t believe his warnings of death. The fourth point means the message we send to the future must include a great deal of information - much, much more than can be written on a granite monument.
Showing signs of danger that are only prevalent in our time will not work. Conca is suggesting something further than what can written or what can be shown. The message has to present some aura around it to make it more intimidating when giving off cautions. This Aural mode of thinking can come from take elements from both visual and linguistic modes to create a more emphasis to the message someone is trying to portray.
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