Visualizing the Prime Ministerial Debates

Thursday, April 29th, 2010
Nouns used by Gordon Brown

For the first time, the main Prime Ministerial candidates for the 2010 UK General Elections, will take part in three live debates. Since the BBC have kindly made the full transcripts available, I decided to have a go at analyzing the data and creating a visual representation in the form of word clouds. I am currently working on my own visualization software, but in the meantime these have been done using Wordle.

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Near Infra Red Pseudocolour using LAB Colour Separations

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
At the back of Clare College

As 2010 is the 100th anniversary of the first published infra red photograph, I thought I’d try my hand using my own digital camera and some easily acquired accessories. If you want, you can skip the theory and go straight to the description of the method and a script for Photoshop.

A quick overview of IR photography

The CCD that is responsible for recording the images photographed by most digital cameras, is already sensitive to the near infra red part of the spectrum. That is, the part of the spectrum outside of the range visible to the human eye, but not so far as that used for, for example, thermal imaging. Since most photographers are not interested in light that they can’t see, this light is usually filtered out by an infra red cutoff filter placed inside the camera body, directly in front of the CCD. However, such filters are imperfect, so with some camera models by CCD spectrum response combining a long exposure with an infra red transmitting filter placed in front of the lens, some of that IR light can be recovered. The figure shows the basic principle, though I should add that the graphs are just a sketch to illustrate the principle and don’t represent an actual CCD response curve.

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