Thursday, 28 February 2019

Artificial Intelligence: Learning to see

Memo Akten: Learning to see

One of the most interesting aspects of computer aided drawing at the moment is the way that AI is being used to open up ways to think about how we think and why we do the things we do. Artificial Intelligence is inseparable from learning software and what it does as it learns, tells us a lot about why we think in the way we do. The artist Memo Akten is looking at how to visualise one of the fundamental problems we have as human beings. The problem of not being able to see another person's point of view. Akten's video of his computer simulation at work makes it clear why we have problems. On the right side of the screen we have images made by a computer program that has been 'fed' with images of the sky, sea and breaking waves. This is the world that this program has 'learnt'. It expects therefore for everything to conform to the behaviour of rocks and sea and sky. It looks for waves splashing when they meet obstacles like rocks, it expects the swell and movement of water to be contrasted with the hard immovability of rocks. It expects the moving areas to reflect light, (the sea and sky) much more readily than the fixed points, (the dark rocks). Edges between moving surfaces and static ones are seen to be where waves break up and produce foam and splashes. The rhythm of sea movement is recorded over and over again, so that the software understands the nature of these rhythms and how they work.




The way the sky gradually changes tonality is understood as a particular curve in space. After being fed thousands of images of the sea and rocks, the software can generate images that are a typical, average view of sea and rocks. This is its world and it knows it well enough to reproduce it. But what happens therefore when its camera or its information feed is trained on something different? In this case a yellow duster, hands and a piece of blue fabric, some wires, a plug and other bits and pieces.



The program can't see the dark mass as a plug, it can only see the experience as a rock. The duster is read as sea, a fold in the duster as sea breaking over a rock, the edge between one material and another the edge between the sea and the sky, a moving hand becomes a sheet of water.

The implication is that if you as a human being grew up in one particular culture/environment everything you would see after that would be 'coloured' by your initial experience. In fact it would be impossible to 'see' the world as it really is, because the world is not a series of objective things, it is a set of relationships, that are read in as many ways as there are readers. The person calling for Brexit is not going to be convinced by another's argument that we should remain, because their world view is so different. Of course gradually the camera feed would educate the right hand world and if the same amount of hours input were given relating to this new environment, dusters would become to be seen as dusters. However because viewpoints can take a lifetime to be constructed, many of us can't take that time to immerse ourselves in another person's point of view, therefore we will forever see the duster as a sea and the plug as a rock.

See more about Memo Akten's 'Learning to See' here

More on computer generated art
Making a start in machine learning





Saturday, 23 February 2019

Drawing and Communication Theory

When the plaque for Pioneer 10 was designed I doubt if the designers had been thinking about communication theory, a very useful tool with which they could have analysed the possible effectiveness of its communication. Lasswell's maxim sums up what he thought communication was, “Who says what to whom, in what channel and with what effect?" Lasswell was probably thinking about verbal rhetoric when he wrote his maxim, it would probably be better if he had used the word ‘communicate’ then he would have covered all the bases. “Who communicates what to whom, in what channel and with what effect?" or if we are to extend communication out to other things it could even be, "What communicates what to what, in what channel and with what effect?"

Robert T. Craig proposed seven traditions of communication theory. The transmissional; Cybernetic or Information theory and the constitutive theories; Rhetorical, Semiotics, Phenomenological, Socio-Psycological, Socio-Cultural and Critical. 

Our ideas about what we are experiencing are very powerful and they can be very different, this is why we often cant see the other person’s point of view. In order to get an idea of what that point of view might be, we can probe around the attempt to communicate and see if anything is revealed that might illuminate what's going on. Hopefully some theory might help. 

The cybernetic theory of communication is perhaps the easiest to deal with because it is based on mechanical principles. Communication is seen as a flow of information and anything that blocks or stops that flow is regarded as 'noise'. Shannon and Weaver, based their idea on Alexander Graham Bell’s initial drawings of how a telephone communication system would work. 

Page from Bell's notebook

The sketch in the centre of Bell's notebook page is the most important as it shows how telephone systems need both a transmitter and a receiver in order to work.


Because this was initially an idea for a mechanical device it was also a lot easier to think of it as a system that might go wrong, something that was happening far too often during the Second World War, and Shannon and Weaver wanted to make sure that if they could, they would help the military ensure that its communication systems worked well. 


The model they came up with is an abstraction of Bell's initial sketch and you can easily see where problems in a communication system could go wrong. The information source needs to be working in such a way that it is decipherable by the information destination. For instance it would be useless to have a Polish speaking information source and an English speaking destination. The transmitter needs to be working effectively; if the transmitter is your voice box, and you have a sore throat, it might mean that you can't shout load enough to make your voice heard. The receiver also needs to be working and in good order, this being not just whether or not your mobile is working correctly, but also your own physical faculties, such as whether or not your hearing is good enough. This model could be applied to any situation, so in the case of a drawing an analysis of the information source would include all the specialist knowledge and skills of the drawer and the ability of the drawer to put this information into an effective shape for transmission. So let's say the information source is an electrician making a circuit diagram that has to be read by another electrician. How well does the first electrician know the conventions of electrical circuit diagrams? Has she understood the problem well enough to make an understandable drawing? What if the electrician is short sighted and hasn't got her glasses with her? Was the electrician's hand shaking because of a previous shock which makes the line drawing very difficult to read, has the paper become crumpled and therefore the drawing has to be read against crumple lines? As you can see it is pretty easy to keep adding things to the list and you very quickly begin to realise how amazing it is that any communication is made. 
The central weakness of a transmission theory is however that it is not concerned with the production of meaning itself, which is a socially mediated process. This is why there are several constitutive theories. 
However as we begin to look at ‘rhetoric’ the oldest of the communication theories, Foss, Foss, & Griffin (1999, p. 6) remind us that rhetoric as a theory was for hundreds of years something only for white, male men of power to use. 

Rhetoric is the oldest tradition in communication theory. The thing about rhetoric is that it is a practical discipline. First taught to Greek and Roman senators and their families, it was initially a verbal tool designed to help develop the skills of persuasion in argument. At its core are what are called ‘rhetoric tropes’. These are the key ideas that were honed in use over many years, initially by very powerful politically motivated men, but much more recently by industries that are designed to persuade us to do things such as buy products and services.

A few rhetoric tropes:
Metaphorwhen something stands for something else: such as,  "The factory was a beehive of buzzing workers." It is used to help people remember things by forging an unexpected connection for the brain between two things that are not normally associated, but which when they are connected reveal something fundamental about each other. Because in some of my drawings I wanted introduce a concept of global warming as a type of vanitas, I used images of flowers, an old idea used by many cultures to remind us of the fragility of life. You could use rhetoric as a tool with which to argue the effectiveness of this. 


Similewhen something is like something else: such as, "The paint was like flesh." Again I use simile in my own drawings, often in the way I make the drawing. In the image of flowers and polar bears above, it is deliberately drawn so that it appears to be emerging or disappearing in a rain of marks, suggestive of seeing things in a rain storm and also being like the trajectories of vibrating atoms in particle physics. I.e. everything seems to be breaking down, losing its identity, very like what happens at a sub-atomic level. 
Metonymyusing a suggestive physical object to embody a more general idea: such as ‘crown’ for royalty; in this case I have been making some studies of the modernist architecture of Dudley zoo, I am hoping to use these in conjunction with the drawings of animals and flowers to represent an idea of the way Modernism could become a trap. The technical drawing of a bear trap, becoming an enclosure that both threatens and separates. 
Technical drawing of a bear trap thought of as an enclosure

Synecdocheusing a part of something to represent the whole: Such as using an image of an eye to represent a person looking or the fist used to represent a human being in revolutionary mode. 

The revolutionary fist

Personificationgiving human qualities to inanimate objects: Such as; "The ground thirsts for blood” or in image construction making an inanimate thing have the characteristics of a human being, as in the drawing of mine below of a gun casting a human shadow. 

The gun casts a human shadow

There are far too many tropes to go through in an introduction like this but if you look up a full list of rhetoric tropes you will recognise them; exaggeration, repetition, emphasis, reversals in expectation, paradox, etc. etc., all designed to help someone making a communication get the idea across to someone else in such a way that it sticks in their memory.

Semiotics, or the study of sign systems, was a few years ago the theory that everyone was using to explain how we communicated. Because of this situation I used to be required to introduce it to all students. See an old blog post from that time that included a guide as to how to do this.
One of the first steps you would be expected to make in a semiotic analysis would be to identify the text and this can be anything not just words. This could be a haircut or a pair of trainers, and in this case the texts we are looking at would be drawings. At the beginning of a semiotic analysis we should also describe the specific medium used, the genre to which the text belongs and the context in which it is found. All these things would be seen as signs or ways to mediate an understanding of signs. There are three main signs; 'Icons', a physical resemblance between the signal and the meaning, (a drawing of a face, representing a face), An 'index' or 'indices' where there is a physical connection with its meaning, (such as smoke indicating a fire) or 'symbols' (forms that get meaning from an agreed set of conventions, such as the Highway Code or a lightbulb used to show that someone has an idea). The reality is that most images have several or double meanings; which means that first of all we can look for what are called denotation signifiers or the literal meaning of a text and then once denotation is established, we can look for further connotations or deeper meanings. (See how this works in an actual analysis here)
Signs are also organised into codes which are very important when it comes to semiotics because they are connected to the cultural communities that share conventions. Therefore it could be argued that a definition of a culture is that of a community of shared understood codes.


Signs used by tramps or hobos

So how does this work when looking at a drawing? It is advised to always use a compare and contrast method, so we need two drawings, in this case I will choose two artists that have already been used as illustrations for different approaches to drawing in my earlier posts. 



Sohan Qadri: Dyed and heavily worked handmade paper

Sohan Qadri's drawings are made directly into and with paper. He dyes papers, makes his own frames for ‘casting’ various paperpulps, scratches into surfaces, pushes holes through, lays objects into wet papers and approaches his paper as a meditative experience, as opposed to Tacita Dean's series of drawings "The Roaring Forties: Seven Boards in Seven Days'  which are drawn on large blackboards using chalks and which refer to cinematic tropes based on older sea narratives. 


Tacita Dean

The first thing we need to do is to describe the specific medium used. In the case of these two drawings they are very different, the paper surface used by Sohan Qadri is handmade and the artist appears to be using the making process as an experience in its own right, the meaning seeming to emerge from the engagement with the materials of making. The meaning would appear to be based in an indexical relationship between the drawings and what they signify, because their very shape, signifies what has gone into their making. The edges of the paper are like they are because of how the paper was made, (I'm afraid the photograph used has trimmed off the edges) but there could well be other layers of meaning because there are other traditions (cultures) that the artist could well be tapping into. In Modernist writings about art there is a tradition of 'truth to materials' and these images of Qadri's were first seen by myself in a Venice Biennale, an event that collects together a wide range of art practices, and that is designed to be seen by a very sophisticated international art audience. Sohan Qadri also appears to be working within a much older religious context, whereby the making of things can be seen as part of a meditative experience, therefore his care in preparing and working with his materials could be read as a meditation on the nature of existence. On the other hand Dean's drawings use white chalk on blackboards, a material combination that in Western European contexts is suggestive of school learning and a type of mark making that is associated with a chalk covered blackboard. (Denotation) This could also be read as an easily erased process, one that is now kept in a museum and frozen into a form that is indicative of an honorific status that is culturally significant. (Connotation) A further reading (second connotation) could be that Dean is operating rather like a schoolmistress and wishes to teach us a lesson. The genre under which both these artists present work is harder to pinpoint. Contemporary drawing could be an umbrella term under which both artists could fit. However within that broad definition these two artists are linked to very different traditions. Dean is tapping into a conceptual tradition of Western art, one that allows her to play with different conventions. In this case the film storyboard, that is used by film makers to think through what they need to do before they spend actual money on sets, actors and locations. She worked from old photographs of men at sea to get the images she needed and the annotations written on the drawing are ones taken directly from those usually seen on actual storyboards, but she has 'twisted' the situation, making these images huge, of a similar size to the cinema screen, and very unlike the size of actual storyboards. The title adds a further layer of potentially contradictory meaning, seven days being the self imposed time limit within which Dean made these images, and as anyone who is aware of conceptual drawing done at the time, a title that lists a time of its own making, is reminiscent of more performative works whereby endurance and time are central to the work's meaning. In Qadri's work time is also important, but in this case it is about significant time being taken to realise the potential of the materials, time taken to soak layers of paper, time taken to dye colour into the paper and time taken to repeat certain actions over and over again, such as the scoring of marks deeply into the paper in order to form a spiral. A spiral form is a very old symbol, used by many religious cultures often to indicate consciousness or spiritual growth. (Dean's blackboard and Qadri's spiral locate these images into different cultural codes, my own awareness of both is because I have experienced one code (the blackboard) and studied the other (the spiral as a religious symbol) Another two genres within contemporary drawing that these two images could be placed within are the abstract and figurative genres. Qadri's images belonging to both the Western tradition of non figurative images and an Indian Yogi tradition that also includes Hindu tantra images. We are now beginning to look at the context for these images and as with many images that arise out of a global art world, the contexts are very slippery and difficult to pin down, and this is where I would argue lies the weakness of a semiotic analysis, because it is dependent on both subjective subject knowledge on the part of the analyst and the ability of the analyst to tease out secondary narratives as connotation.


17th century Hindu tantra image

What superficially looks as if it is a very scientific method of analysing images, gradually opens out to reveal itself as being yet another narrative convention, not unlike Montaigne's essay structures. It could be quite easy at this point to begin comparing Dean's square blackboards with the black square in the Hindu tantra image, but although they have a formal similarity their contexts are so far apart that it would be a comparison too far.

The Phenomenological tradition in communication analysis is about things as they appear in our experience, thus this area of communication is about the meaning of experiences. This tradition has at times become associated with 'embodied thinking' because our body is central to a perceptual grasp of the world. This area of thinking makes us very aware that the way we are constructed deeply shapes the way we communicate. For instance most of our sense organs are located as far from the ground as possible, they are raised up, so that we can see further and catch sounds travelling at height over the ground, rather than having them muffled by tall vegetation. Many of our concepts begin with an awareness of body schemas. For instance in verbal languages words such as 'digesting' information, 'seeing' what someone means, or 'grasping' meaning, are deeply linked to how we use our bodies. Concepts such as justice, which is about right and wrong, come from our awareness of being able to stand up straight and in balance when we are fit and healthy, in comparison to how we have to lie down, bend over in pain or become off balance when things are not right and we are ill or very old. This relationship between justice and balance is why we have an image of the scales of justice set over our most prestigious law courts.

The other aspect of the phenomenological tradition is focused on the experience of self and others, and how phenomena are perceived. Subjective experiences can therefore be phenomenological data. It is an area whereby the difficulty in establishing 'authentic' relationships is explored and how person to person communication can be effected. Other people are thought about as to how they appear in our experience and how a dialogue can be established that 'confirms' the existence of the other, or which creates 'meaning' out of the dialogue with others. Heidegger is central to this approach. When thinking about how to use the phenomenological tradition to think about art, he suggests that truth and art are related in the dynamic processes of coming into the presence of and are about a bringing forth. Therefore you can use an awareness of how the maker has left traces of the process of 'bringing forth' the drawing. Art he stated, is “the happening of truth”, nature and art are seen by Heidegger as being very similar, he saw both as forms of poiesis, both being generative, the bringing forth of entities being central to art's meaning and of course nature is the site of pro-creation. He believed that if science looks to understand nature for its validation, then the processes and practices of art have another, equally valid claim to truth values.
If we look at certain types of drawing we can perhaps see how a phenomenological approach to communication analysis can be used.


   Avis Newman: The day's residues V 1981 

Scale is perhaps the first thing that confronts you when you see some of Avis Newman's drawings from the 1980s. Then you have the direct experience of being able to see the results of her body stretching over the canvas as she makes her marks. The coming into being of an image like this is hard to see on screen, which is why you need to look at actual drawings to use this theory effectively, but when confronting images like this because they are bigger than you are, you immediately have a bodily feeling of being able to experience their physical presence. Within the field of vision things of this size force you to engage with them because you have to scan around in order to see what is going on, and as you do you are forced to engage with your own body, stretching to one side or straining your neck, you can then trace the actions of another human being, and as you do so you become aware that your own body begins to want to move in sympathy or in harmony with the rhythms of movement that you read in the making of the image. Out of this can emerge a phenomenological reading of the experience. 

The Socio-Psychological tradition is useful when you want to link an approach to thinking about drawing to ideas about the psychological profile of the artist that made the drawing, especially when we are working within the 'expressionist' tradition. It can also be used to help understand drawings by artists that deliberately set out to link the expressive mark making potential of drawing to an understanding of the psychological nature of character in other human beings. 

Saul Steinberg; party

In Steinberg's drawing above, we can see how we are being led to understand these different personalities through changes in style or mark making. 

De Kooning

In De Kooning's drawing above the 'expressive' style is often read as being something to do with the nature of De Kooning as an expressive artist. His abstract expressionism relies for its impact on a particular set of marks or traces of gestures that are unique to De Kooning himself. This brings up issues about 'authentic' communication and suggests that some artist's marks are more authentic than others and this 'ranking' of emotional weight can highlight a weakness in the Socio-Psychological tradition. It was this 'weakness' that was to lead to the demise of abstract expressionism as an art form. Why was one artist's 'touch' more expressive or more profound than another? Cy Twombly was an artist that made work that acknowledged this issue, his 'marks' becoming a sort of signature that stood for the sociological signs of belonging to a certain sub-group preoccupation or 'sign' for being an artist. (See further reflections on this here and here)

Cy Twombly

The Socio-Cultural tradition is one that you might want to use to reflect on the  reproduction and production of social order. 

Rauschenberg

This approach is particularly useful when looking at images that reflect the social conditions of a particular time and place. In the case of the Rauschenberg drawing above it is very much of its time and is an image designed to ask questions of the nature of American culture. In contrast Barthélémy Toguo, is a Cameroonian artist and his work can't be understood outside of Cameroonian traditions, even though he now works internationally, the images cannot be read without an awareness of a now fast slipping away African culture. 

Barthélémy Toguo

Toguo's work reflects upon how traffic between the developing world and the West shapes ideas of culture, the betweenness of his approach being perhaps at its most potent in his work, “Transit” (1996), which consisted of performances in airports and train stations, in which he disrupted transit security by carrying bags carved out of wood or wearing a cartridge belt filled with candles. His watercolour drawings act as a travel diary, with human-like forms transforming into animal shapes or abstract creatures, they explore the borders of what it is to be a person, especially one that is a hybrid identity. An author such as Zygmunt Bauman, who's book “Identity” explores the shifting nature of what it is to be a human being in todays society would be an interesting lens with which to look at drawings when using the Socio-Cultural tradition.

Critical communication theory is an umbrella concept that allows you to critique the concept of drawing as an activity within society. For instance you may want to explore contemporary drawing traditions as an aspect of late capitalism and demonstrate how the Art World and its values have developed out of the trading of exclusive and expensive commodities. The social, historical, and ideological forces and structures which produce and constrain a drawing practice could all be explored within critical theory. The focus on media and technology within critical theory (especially by those writers that are associated with the Frankfurt School), can allow for approaches that demonstrate how technology shapes the way that drawing can be taken up and understood within a society dominated by mass reproduction methods. Drawing within critical theory can also be seen as interrogating the nature of representation itself.

In the monochrome painting below Tansey depicts a man painting out a classic image from the representational history of painting. (Michelangelo's Last Judgement). He has climbed the aspirational ladder and now whites out history, replacing it with a field of white abstraction, this is also, as he paints out history, also erasing the man's own shadow. Tansey is questioning the nature of contemporary painting, suggesting that the problem with abstraction is that it cannot deal with human issues, and will if allowed to, finally erase the human from art. This is an issue that at some point I would like to explore from an object orientated ontological perspective, but this post has gone on for far too long, especially as it was only put together to help put into context some of the issues raised by my post on the Pioneer 10 plaque.

Mark Tansey

To sum up:

There are seven traditional ways within which you can approach communication theory. 

Cybernetic: information processing

Rhetorical: the practical art of discourse
Semiotic: intersubjective mediation by signs
Phenomenological: embodied learning, experience of otherness; dialogue
Socio-Psychological: expression, inter-action, & influence
Socio-Cultural: (re)production of social order
Critical: discursive reflection

Visual communication theory can be seen as a subset of communication theory and it is itself a multi-disciplinary area. As well as art and aesthetics, you will find writings from mass communication (e.g. photography, advertising), film and cinema studies, education, anthropology, psychology, philosophy, linguistics, semiotics, architecture, and archaeology. This rich mix allows for lots of cross fertilisation and reading can generate ideas by skimming across different territories before diving in for a deep read.

Some texts that you might find useful if you wanted to research the area in more depth:

Allen, N (Ed.). (2002) Working with Words and Images: New Steps in an Old Dance. Westport, CT: Ablex.
Arnheim, R. (1974) Art and Visual Perception: A Psychology of the Creative Eye. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Barthes, R. (1977) Image Music Text. Trans. Heath. New York: Hill and Wang.
Barthes, R (1964) Elements of Semiology, Barthes introduces classifications borrowed from structural linguistics that consist of language and speech, signified and signifier, syntagm and system, and denotation and connotation.
Baudrillard, J (1995) Simulacra and Simulation New York: University of Michigan Press (The age old issue of mimesis brought into a contemporary context)
Berger, A. A. (2007) Seeing is Believing London:McGraw-Hill (A semiotic approach to visual communications)
Berger, J (1973) Ways of Seeing London: Viking Press (Sociological/semiotic introduction)
Curtiss, D. (1987). Introduction to visual literacy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall (Aesthetics and learning theory)
Dondis, D. A. (1973) Primer of Visual Literacy Massachusetts: MIT Press (Artist/designer viewpoint)
Foss, K. A. Foss, S. K. & Griffin C. L. (1999) Feminist Rhetorical Theories Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA
McLuhan, M. and Fiore, Q (1967) Q The Medium is the Massage London: Penguin  (A much more playful investigation of how media shapes what can be said. Most importantly it’s visual)
Mitchell, W. J. T. (1987) Iconology: Image, Text, Ideology Chicago: University Of Chicago Press (All Mitchell’s texts are about visual philosophy, an extensive collection of interesting writings)
Mitchell, W. J. T. (1994) Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal and Visual Representation. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Mitchell, W. J. T (2005) What do Pictures Want? The Lives and Loves of Images. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Moore, D and Dwyer, F. Eds. (1994) Visual Literacy: A Spectrum of Visual Learning Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall (Visual communication theory linked to educational theories)

Morgan, J and Welton, P (1992) See What I Mean: An Introduction to Visual Communication London: Hodder Arnold (Good basic student guide to art/design and visual communication)
Petterson, R. (1993) Visual Information New York: Educational Technology (Information theory bias)

Tufte, Edward. (2001) The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, 2nd Ed. New York, Graphics Press (Classic book on how diagrams work)


Worth, S (1981) Studying Visual Communication Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press (A Guide to the wide range of theories available)

Try this Handout it might help clarify things

How to conduct a visual analysis using semiotics: https://contextualandtheoreticalstudies.blogspot.com/2012/03/using-semiotics-to-decode-image.html

Thoughts on The Pioneer Plaque, the post that made me think about putting up something on communication theory.


Saturday, 16 February 2019

The Pioneer Plaque

The Pioneer Plaque

An understanding of scientific concepts has allowed us as a species to begin to think beyond our world and to imagine what it might be like to meet an extra-terrestrial being. When we as a species decide that we want to communicate with Aliens, what do we do? We send them a drawing, and in this case it is a drawing of which we know quite a lot about the decisions made as to why the images on it are what they are. 

Pioneer 10


In 1972, an attempt to contact extra-terrestrial life began with the launch of the Pioneer 10 spacecraft, a vehicle designed to attain enough velocity to escape the solar system and therefore the possibility of reaching an extra-terrestrial civilisation. The idea of including a specially crafted message that was designed to be read by any extra-terrestrials it might bump into, was a late addition and was overseen by Dr. Carl Sagan, Professor Frank Drake  and artist Linda Salzman.

The problem these three had to solve was whether they could come up with any universally understood concepts that could be communicable to intelligent extra-terrestrial life. The first principle that was decided upon when this question was being debated was that the only similarity between Earth bound humans and any extra-terrestrial civilisation would be that we belong to the same universe. Because it is science and mathematics that we use to understand that universe, it was further reasoned that this would be the same for any other species. Hence the Pioneer Plaque was initiated, which would operate as a symbolic message to any 
extra-terrestrials the Pioneer 10 might encounter. This plaque was designed to be attached to the exterior of Pioneer 10 and had its visual language developed by directly linking the drawing on the plaque to clear, fundamental scientific concepts.
The first issue decided upon was to set out a standard for the measurement of distance and time, a standard that could then be used throughout the plaque to ensure consistency. In order to do this it was decided that hydrogen, the most abundant element in the cosmos, would be the element around which a communication system would be evolved. Therefore it was decided to draw a symbolic representation of two hydrogen atoms at the top left of the plaque, each in a different energy state.


Image of hydrogen atoms as inscribed on the Pioneer plaque

The text immediately below is how the image is described in a scientific journal, the hyper-links were also in the description, so I have left them in because they give an idea of how complex this idea is. 

'The image above is of a schematic representation of the hyperfine transition of hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe. The spin-flip transition of a hydrogen atom’s electron has a frequency of about 1420.405 MHz, which corresponds to a period of 0.704 ns. Light at this frequency has a vacuum wavelength of 21.106 cm (which is also the distance the light travels in that time period). Below the symbol, the small vertical line—representing the binary digit 1—specifies a unit of length (21 cm) as well as a unit of time (0.7 ns). Both units are also used as measurements in the other symbols'.

I presume the scientists behind this thinking thought that the creatures that would meet Pioneer would also be scientists. Not just that but that as scientists they would also think like earth scientists. 


Fundamental concepts such as the hydrogen atom can however be described in several ways and the concept of a schematic representation is itself a very complex one, one that would have first of all been introduced to people like Sagan in school science classrooms. Below are a few other representations of Hydrogen and its electron. There are several problems with the decision to use the symbol chosen. For instance ionised hydrogen, i.e. a hydrogen atom stripped of its electron and existing as a free proton, is pretty common in the interstellar medium, and solar wind. So the format of one proton surrounded by one electron doesn't always describe the state of hydrogen. It has also been established that the electron  moves in a wave pattern around an elliptical orbit. This orbit is often referred to as a cloud, because the electron operates in three dimensional space and moves so fast it is in effect occupying a cloud of possible positions. The idea of a static symbol like a dot or spot, would be hard for anyone outside of a small sub-group to understand. 








Words can be put together in different ways to say the same thing. For instance we can rewrite the paragraph above like this: 


'When atoms of hydrogen change from one energy state to another—a process called the hyperfine transition—electromagnetic radiation is released. It is this wave that harbours the standard of measure used throughout the illustrations on the plaque. The wavelength (approximately 21 centimeters) serves as a spatial measurement, and the period (approximately .7 nanoseconds) serves as a measurement of time. The final detail of this schematic is a small tick between the atoms of hydrogen, assigning these values of distance and time to the binary number 1'.

As you can see from both the written and drawn illustrations above, there are several ways to visualise or verbalise the idea of a hydrogen atom, in particular how do you visualise an idea that is in many places at once and is always in movement? Does a fast moving electron appear to be more like a pixelated cloud, or does it look more like a series of linked wave forms, or would an external observer be more likely to be aware of the presence of antimatter and would expect this to be represented too?

Bees draw by flying dancing patterns through the air, what would a life form that had a similar evolutionary history to that of a bee make of this plaque? 

The most prominent figures on the plaque are those of two adult humans: a man and woman. The man bends his arm and displays an open palm. At the time it was believed that this was an internationally agreed greeting on the Earth, but it would be meaningless to an extraterrestrial civilisation and even on some parts of the Earth a naked man with his arm raised could be seen as a threat. The drawing could just as well have been done upside down and from the back for all the sense someone who wasn't trained in the conventions of reading a drawing would make of it. When photographs were first shown to Amazonian Indians they apparently couldn't recognise what they were, so even it would appear indexical systems such as photography are culturally learnt. We are so immersed in a photographically centred culture that we have forgotten, or never noticed that we had to learn what photographs represented. The woman hangs her arms by her sides and stands with her weight shifted rearward apparently to dispel any misunderstandings regarding a fixed body and limb position; it was drawn this way to show that we are mobile and flexible. There was little thought going into the relative positions between the representation of the man and the woman. The man is active, raising his arm in salute, the woman passive, her body less confrontational. Another totally accepted cultural norm of the 1970s is in place. As well of course of the stylised haircuts that might as well be hats or strange growths 
and the fact that both figures have no facial or body hair, factors that speak so much about cultural norms of the time. The man's haircut and woman's hair style single them out as young mature white western caucasians, their hair, facial features and body types set out according to a particular norm or measure, (no one is too old, disabled, fat or too thin) that other people, races and cultures were at the time measured against. 
Beside the illustrations of the humans is the binary number 8, inscribed between two ticks, indicating the height the woman. The extra-terrestrial being is supposed to conclude that the woman is 8 units tall, the unit being the wavelength (21 centimeters) described by the hyperfine transition key; thus, the woman is 8 times 21 centimeters, or about 5.5 feet tall.
At the heart of the plaque is an exploding star shape of lines and dashes. In the centre of this star format is meant to be our home star, the sun; the radial spokes signify the relative distances and directions to pulsars, (rapidly rotating neutron stars that emit electromagnetic radiation at regular intervals). Accompanying each line is the period of the respective pulsar, once again, in binary. Not only does this map communicate position, but time as well. The rate of electromagnetic bursts from pulsars changes over time; thus, the period of the pulsars denoted on the plaque serves as a timestamp. It was presumed that a civilisation that has developed radio astronomy would have the capability to comprehend the nature of pulsars. Which they may well have, but far more complex a problem for them to solve would be the interpretation of this plaque. As a further confirmation of where the Earth is, our solar system’s planets are depicted along the bottom edge of the plaque with their respective distances to the sun in binary. A line with an arrowhead leaves from the third circle from the large circle on the left and a small drawing of what looks like a falling sailing boat is next to it. This represents Pioneer 10 leaving the Earth, the third planet from the sun. The problem being that the relative sizes of the spacecraft, sun and planets and distances between them can't be represented in such a small drawing. The Earth is about the size of one of the Sun's average sunspots, and if you were to link sizes to relative distances between planets you would have to have a drawing with long extensions that would make the spacecraft unworkable. The drawing of the sailing boat on its side reappears in the background behind the drawing of the man and woman. It is meant to show relative sizes and explain that the size of Pioneer 10 could be used to help visualise the size of grown humans. However the convention of overlapping forms in a drawing to represent one thing being in front of another is a very sophisticated one, one not learnt by humans until quite a late stage in their educational development. The idea that you can leave gaps in a form to suggest it sits behind other forms is usually only learnt if you go to schools that teach drawing from a Western European perspective. The fact that the Pioneer spacecraft is visualised from one specific point of view is also something only understandable if you follow engineering drawing conventions of plans and elevations. So lets hope the drawing is first seen by an extra-terrestrial engineer. 


A photograph of Pioneer 10, showing the plaque in place

It may well be that an advanced extra-terrestrial being would be able to visualise whole cultures and species types by analysing patterns of making revealed in the making of any object and that by looking at the way the Pioneer was engineered would be able to deduce the evolution of the creatures that built it. If so it could also be important to this creature to provide for itself an aesthetic framework within which to view this new knowledge. Because of its own evolutionary history it might well take a deep interest in insect or crustacea evolution and accompanying structural and aesthetic possibilities and decide that all terrestrial evolution is based on the structure of a flea or shrimp.

Robert Hooke: Drawing of a flea: 1665

Diagram of Evolutionary links that suggests that evolution from a distance is very shrimp like

It is most likely that this alien creature will have evolved in such a way that it understands itself as part of an always changing set of relationships. It will be aware of beginnings, middles and ends of these relationships and that all beginnings and ends are simply moments between changing patterns. The idea that we could communicate with this creature was one you would expect a well known scientist like Sagan to have thought through a little more. In some ways it could be seen as quite funny, but in others it is indicative of the reason why we have managed to get the world into the state it is. As we have come to understand some of the complexities of the physical world, to the extent that we can send a spaceship out into the void, we have at the same time not been able to understand how blinkered our view of ourselves and others is. We designed those figures on that plaque with a certain presumption, one that is beginning 45 years later to unpick itself.  At the same time that many humans are shaving themselves everyday to become hairless like the drawings on the plaque, other humans are being persecuted because they appear to be neither of the two genders represented. The images of the people represented represent a view of humankind that was in fact not very kind, or was somewhat thoughtless.

In the book 'Sum: Tales from the Afterlives', David Eagleman recounts forty stories, each one describing a different afterlife. In his short story 'Microbe'  he gives an account whereby God is discovered to be the God of microbes.



"There is no afterlife for us. Our bodies decompose upon death, and then the teeming floods of microbes living inside us move on to better places. This may lead you to assume that God doesn't exist—but you'd be wrong. It's simply that He doesn't know we exist. He is unaware of us because we're at the wrong spatial scale. God is the size of a bacterium. He is not something outside and above us, but on the surface and in the cells of us.

God created life in His own image; His congregations are the microbes.
The chronic warfare over host territory, the politics of symbiosis and infection, the ascendancy of strains: this is the chessboard of God, where good clashes with evil on the battleground of surface proteins and immunity and resistance".
From 'Sum' by David Eagleman

It is useful to remind ourselves every now and again that there is far more chance that alien life would be more like bacteria than humans. Artificial intelligences are being taught to learn in laboratories all over the world and the more we work with the associated software programming the more we become aware of how blinkered learning actually is. Whatever is taught to an AI becomes the world that the AI exists in and it 'sees' everything else from the point of view from whereby it was fed the initial information. But more on that in the next post.



Sum is available to download here