Automating Vision explores the rise of seeing machines through four case studies: facial recognition, drone vision, mobile and locative media and driverless cars. Proposing a conceptual lens of camera consciousness, which is drawn from the early visual anthropology of Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead, Automating Vision accounts for the growing power and value of camera technologies and digital image processing.
Behind the smart camera devices examined throughout the book lies a set of increasingly integrated and automated technologies underpinned by artificial intelligence, machine learning and image processing. Seeing machines are now implicated in growing visual data markets and are supported by emerging layers of infrastructure that they coproduce. In this book, Anthony McCosker and Rowan Wilken address the social impacts, the disruptions and reconfigurations to existing digital media ecosystems, to urban environments and to mobility and social relations that result from the increasing automation of vision and explore how it might be possible to ensure a safe and equitable future as we learn to see with and negotiate the interventions of seeing machines.
Author(s): Anthony McCosker and Rowan Wilken
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2020
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
CONTENTS
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
1 Interrogating Seeing Machines
2 Camera Consciousness
3 Face Value
4 Automating and Augmenting Mobile Vision
5 Drone Vision
6 How Does a Car Learn to See?
7 Automating Visual Literacies
References
Index