The University of Texas at Austin Department of Radio-Television-Film RTF 314: Development of the Motion Picture Unique # 08160 / Spring 2013 Lectures: Monday‚ Wednesday and Friday: 1:00 – 2:00 p.m.‚ BMC 2.106 Screenings: Monday‚ 7:30 – 10:00 p.m.‚ BUR 106 Professor: Caroline Frick‚ PhD Office: CMA 5.112 Office Hours: Wednesdays‚ 9am to 12pm and by appointment Email: cfrick@austin.utexas.edu Teaching Assistants: Paul Gansky: gansky.paul@gmail.com Colleen Montgomery:
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“PRINCIPLES OF MOTION ECONOMY” These 22 rules are principles of motion economy are profitably applied to many kinds of work. Although not all are applicable to every operation‚ they do form a basis or a code for improving the efficiency and reducing fatigue in manual work. USE OF THE HUMAN BODY 1. The two hands should begin as well as complete their motions at the same time. 2. The two hands should not be idle at the same time‚ except during rest periods. 3. Motions of the arms should be
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the World in Motion Human beings are in constant search for sources that can provide them with adequate resources to meet their basic needs. The desire to get an adequate supply of resources has made people move from one location to another. However‚ people’s needs are complex and differ. This observation makes it difficult to have a specific factor to attribute human movement from one area to another. Bailyn asserts that the human world can best be described as the world in motion. In this type
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Can slow motion replay improve jurors memory of evidence in a case? Caruso‚ Burns‚ and Converse (2016) examined the effect of video evidence on jury judgment of intentionality‚ the degree of which the harm caused was deliberate and premeditated‚ in criminal cases. Caruso et al. hypothesized that viewing a video in slow motion increases the perceived level of intent. After conducting four different studies‚ each with different variables‚ their results showed that slow motion footage perceives more
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Visual – Dr Daniel Chandler MC10220 Matthew Ruckwood 03/05/2005 The Perception of Motion Pictures “Why‚ when we look at a succession of still images on the film screen‚ are we able to see a continuous moving image?” During the late 1970s and early 1980s a small group of film scholars radically broke away from the time-honoured explanation of how the human eye (and mind) perceived the apparent motion in cinema. They abandoned the notions of ‘persistence of vision’ and the Phi phenomenon
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Name Noah Meador___ Motion in 2D Simulation Go to http://phet.colorado.edu/simulations/sims.php?sim=Motion_in_2D and click on Run Now. 1) Once the simulation opens‚ click on ‘Show Both’ for Velocity and Acceleration at the top of the page. Now click and drag the red ball around the screen. Make 3 observations about the blue and green arrows (also called vectors) as you drag the ball around. 1. The green line points in the direction that the ball is going to go 2. The blue line changes the
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The motion picture industry is a competitive‚ multi-billion dollar industry involving production crews‚ marketing crews‚ actors‚ directors‚ distribution companies‚ movie theaters‚ and movie rental companies. Four variables are commonly used to measure the success of a motion picture; these variables include the opening weekend gross sales‚ total gross sales‚ number of theaters showing the movie‚ and weeks in the top sixty of gross sales. Using a sample of 100 motion pictures from 2005 and numerical
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TAP 601-1: Brownian motion Brownian motion (named after the botanist Robert Brown) is the presumably random drifting of particles suspended in a fluid (a liquid or a gas) or the mathematical model used to describe such random movements‚ which is often called a particle theory. The experiment of Brownian motion in a smoke cell is a classic experiment that gives strong circumstantial evidence for the particulate nature of air. Materials: ✓ Smoke cell‚ incorporating a light source
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Case Analysis 2 - Research in Motion - RIM 1. What were some of the challenges that RIM faced to protect its intellectual property‚ and how did RIM handle those challenges? Research In Motion (RIM)‚ a global leader in wireless innovation‚ revolutionized the mobile industry with the introduction of the BlackBerry® solution in 1999. There are multiple examples of the challenges RIM faced to protect its Intellectual Property as well as how those challenges were handled. One such example is RIM
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CBSE TEST PAPER-02 CLASS - IX Science (Motion) 1. If a body starts from rest‚ what can be said about the acceleration of body? (a) Positively accelerated (c) Uniform accelerated (b) Negative accelerated (d) None of the above [1] 2. What does slope of position time graph give? (a) speed (b) acceleration (c) uniform speed [1] (d) Both (a) and (c) depending upon the type of graph. 3. When a body moves uniformly along the circle‚ then:(a) its velocity changes but speed remains the same (b) its
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