The Bates College Imaging Center: A Model for Interdisciplinarity and Collaboration
The Bates College Imaging and Computing Center (known on campus simply as
the Imaging Center) is a new interdisciplinary facility designed to
support Bates's vision of a liberal arts education, as codified by its
newly-adopted General Education Program. This program reflects the
increasingly porous and mutable nature of disciplinary boundaries and
emphasizes the effectiveness of teaching writing as a means of
improving students' ability to think, reason and communicate. The
Imaging Center strives to further expand the reach of this program by
promoting visual thinking and communication--serving as a catalyst for
interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary work. In many ways the Center
embodies most of the ideas underpinning Bates's new General Education
Program and is a model on this campus for the kind of transformative
work cyberinfrastructure will enable.
Floorplan image courtesy of the Bates College Imaging and Computing Center.
These consequences, of course, are antithetical to
the goals of academic programs intended to foster interdisciplinary
thinking. To counter these effects, the Bates Imaging Center provides a
visually-inviting space available to all members of the campus
community. Its array of equipment and instrumentation, and its
extensive computer networking, make it the campus hub for collaborative and interdisciplinary projects, especially those that are computationally intensive, apply visualization techniques, or include graphical or image-based components.
Imaging Center Public Gallery (photo courtesy of the
Bates College Imaging and Computing Center)
The
Imaging Center's central public gallery provides comfortable seating,
readily accessible kiosk computers and wireless networking to encourage
faculty and students to use the space for both planned and spontaneous
meetings of small groups. To make more public the scholarly activities
taking place within the Center, a contiguous array of three large
flat-panel LCD monitors displays looped sequences of images created by
faculty and students who are using the Center's resources to support
their work. Image sequences include, for example, micrographs obtained
using the Center's microscopes, digital photographs taken by students
working in the fine arts, maps generated using GIS mapping software,
and animated multidimensional graphs of political data. The sequences
are designed to exemplify effective visual communication and to
juxtapose work by faculty and students drawn from widely varied
disciplines throughout the campus. The display publicizes the scholarly
activities taking place within the Center, and by encouraging viewers
to think more deeply about the images, cultivates more sophisticated
approaches to the images they encounter or create in their own work.
The
Center's gallery is abutted on one side by an imaging lab and on the
other by a computer room.The imaging lab contains a digital
photography studio and a suite of optical microscope rooms with a
shared sample preparation room. Driven by the goals of improving the accessibility of work that is conventionally done in isolation, and of
making the Center's resources available to as broad an audience as
possible, the microscope rooms are each electronically linked with the
computer room. This allows images obtained with the microscopes to be
displayed for large groups in real time, complete with two-way audio communication between the microscope operator and the audience.
Imaging Lab (photo courtesy of the Bates College Imaging and Computing Center)
Imaging Lab (photo courtesy of the Bates College Imaging and Computing Center)
Computer Room (photo courtesy of the Bates College Imaging and Computing Center)
The
Imaging Center's resources are leveraged by a one-gigabit-per-second
network that connects the Imaging Center to the campus's Language
Resource Center and the Digital Media Center (the latter supports audio
and video work). In this way each center can be physically located for
the convenience of its most frequent users yet large data files and
other electronic resources can be readily shared between centers. Local
storage of the large data sets and images is provided by a two terabyte
storage array.
As the Imaging Center moves forward, its
participation in the Internet2 consortium will provide wide bandwidth
access to large databases such as those relied upon by users of GIS
mapping software and bioinformatics researchers. It will also make it
possible for scientists working on the Bates campus to operate
specialized instrumentation located at large research institutions and
to do so in real time. These capabilities will bring to a small liberal
arts college in Maine the unfettered access to databases, equipment and
distributed expertise that were formerly available only to those
working in large research facilities.
As is true with
cyberinfrastructure generally, it's the Imaging Center's people that
make it work. Two full-time staff members--one with expertise in
database management, computer hardware and software development and GIS
mapping, and the other a microscopist and photographer with technical
training in optics and imaging technologies--bring a wealth of
experience to the Imaging Center. They support the Center's users by
training them to use unfamiliar tools and techniques. Some workshops
and group training sessions are used for this purpose, but the widely
varying schedules and backgrounds of the Center's users render
scheduled, "one size fits all" training sessions insufficient. To
complement these offerings, the staff is developing electronic training
materials that use imbedded hyperlinks to provide the background that
some readers might be missing. These documents have the advantages of
being readily customized and updated, allowing readers to focus their
attention on those aspects of a topic that are particularly pertinent
or unfamiliar. Because the documents are available to anyone with
internet access, they can be used whenever and wherever the need arises.
As
workers in an ever-expanding range of fields seek to express or explore
ideas through expert use of images, and to find and convey meaning in
large multidimensional data sets through increased visualization
capability, there will be a concomitant demand for improved visual
literacy. As a result, acquiring the ability to communicate and think
visually will be seen as an integral part of a complete education. This
realization has motivated the development of a new type of center whose
impact is dramatically enhanced by recent advances in computer power
and connectivity. With the Imaging Center providing a practical
working model of interdisciplinarity and numerous examples of the power
of visualization, Bates is well placed to take advantage of the new
directions afforded by a well-deployed cyberinfrastructure.
How to cite this work
Matthew J. Coté. "The Bates College Imaging Center: A Model for Interdisciplinarity and Collaboration." Academic Commons Issue Name (Spring 2008): 16 June 2013. <http://www.academiccommons.org/>.- Login or register to post comments
- Email this Essay
Delicious
Newsvine
Facebook
Google
Technorati