Jean Piot's Print Portfolio

Page 1

JEAN PIOT’S 2011 GRAPHIC DESIGN PORTFOLIO



WING Flight

SPAN School

Eagle

School

Eagle

WING Flight

SPAN School

Eagle

artist statement Effective communication is cultivated by the fruits of a strict code of discipline and self-improvement. As a deep thinker, I cognitively enrich my life to cultivate a natural state of creative expression; ultimately, the artistic endeavors I pursue are innovatively driven and executed with skill. While marching to the sound of a different drumbeat, I keep my friends close and my cats closer.

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20 2012

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WING Flight

Wing-Span

SPAN

Wing-span Flight School teaches the basics of aeronautics to civilians. The mission, to create a logo, ad campaign, and web site for the company; the result, a mix of vintage colors and contemporary styling, which defines the fun and colorful tone of the organization.

School

Eagle

WING Flight

SPAN School

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NEWS (7/11/11) Scouts glimpse aviation from the inside out Downpours and chilly temperatures couldn't keep Boy Scout troops from setting up camp behind AOPA's headquarters at Frederick Municipal Airport in Frederick, Md., April 8 for an aviation camporee weekend to work toward their aviation badges.

WING Flight

SPAN School

Eagle

WING Flight

(7/13/11) Instructors can help find fix for Calif. flight training With provisions of a California law that could burden flight training institutions with added regulations and fees on hold until July 1, AOPA and its allies are working to develop solutions that provide consumer protection for flight students without damaging the state?s flight school industry.

SPAN School

Eagle WING Flight

SPAN School

Eagle

Images from left to right: flight suit patches, poster advertisement, and Website.

Get Certified Now! For More Information call 843-999-8765 or visit us at wingspan.com


Dog-Tag Dog-Tag is a nonprofit organization that I developed in order to unite disabled war veterans and under-privileged animals for the purpose of companionship and healing.

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For information about our upcoming events, Visit us at, dogtag.com\events

EVERY HEART.

UNITE & BRING PETS TO VETS

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

For information about our upcoming events, Visit us at, dogtag.com\events

Bringing Pets to Vets

EVERY CHALLENGE. EVERYBATTLE. CHALLENGE. EVERY EVERY BATTLE. EVERY HEART. EVERY HEART.

UNITE UNITE & & FIGHT FIGHT BRING PETS TO VETS

Dear Mr. English: I want to begin by thanking you for your dedication to the Toys For Tots program over the last four years. I am contacting you in regards to the recent toy drive at Black Baud headquarters. Your participation with the event was greatly appreciated. The amount of toys collected were at record amount. We nearly tripled the amount of donations received this year, compared to last. I am proud to say that this has been one of the most successful events in the history of our program. Again, we can’t thank you enough for your hard work and dedication. Keep up the good work, we hope to have an outstanding year with your help.

BRING PETS TO VETS

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

WHAT IS DOG TAG? We match homeless and special-needs DOGtag DOGtag animals with veterans in need of someone

Sincerely,

Sgt Piot USMCR 211 Grove St. Charleston, SC 29401

Bringing Pets to Vets

EVERY CHALLENGE. EVERY BATTLE. EVERY HEART.

UNITE & FIGHT

Bringing Pets to Vets

special by utilizing our unique personality match-making system, which results in a match that is made in heaven. For information about our upcoming events, Visit us at, dogtag.com\events

BRING PETS TO VETS

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

WHAT IS DOG TAG? We match homeless and special-needs DOGtag DOGtag animals with veterans in need of someone Bringing Pets to Vets

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

WHAT IS DOG TAG? We match homeless and special-needs DOGtag DOGtag animals with veterans in need of someone

Bringing Pets to Vets

special by utilizing our unique personality match-making system, which results in a match that is made in heaven.

August 6, 2010 Ernie English 1235 Vector Ave. North Charleston, SC 29401

Bringing Pets to Vets

Bringing Pets to Vets

WHAT IS DOG TAG? We match homeless and special-needs DOGtag DOGtag animals with veterans in need of someone Bringing Pets to Vets

DOGtag

DOGtag

Bringing Pets to Vets

special by utilizing our unique personality match-making system, which results in a match that is made in heaven. For information about our upcoming events, Visit us at, dogtag.com\events

EVERY CHALLENGE. EVERY BATTLE. EVERY HEART.

UNITE & FIGHT BRING PETS TO VETS

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

DOGtag Bringing Pets to Vets

WHAT IS DOG TAG? We match homeless and special-needs DOGtag DOGtag animals with veterans in need of someone

Images from left to right: letterhead, envelope, business cards, and postcard.

Bringing Pets to Vets

EVERY CHALLENGE.

Bringing Pets to Vets

special by utilizing our unique personality match-making system, which results in a match that is made in heaven.

Bringing Pets to Vets

special by utilizing our unique personality match-making system, which results in a match that is made in heaven. For information about our upcoming events, Visit us at, dogtag.com\events


{ support the cause }

Back

The main objective of DOGtag is to ease the pain and suffering of injured and disabled war veterans while also saving and rehabilitating animals.

How do we know this method works, and what are the benefits it offers you may ask? Some examples on how pets can help are.

“After coming back from Iraq, I suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I couldn’t sleep at night; I was keeping my partner up at night and was wearing on the relationships with my peers. After meeting my match through Dogtag, my family members could see an immediate difference in my mood and attitude. I could sleep an entire night, without waking up multiple times and looking out the window. Thanks Dogtag!!!!” Cpl Jean Piot

What is our goal? Its to What do we do?

We match homeless and special-needs animals with veterans in need of someone special by utilizing our unique personality matchmaking system, which results in a match that is made in heaven.

continue to provide aid to animals and veterans while lowering the percentage of veterans experiencing stress from mental and physical related ailments, and animals being euthanized.

Dogtag is a unique way of thinking; we offer nontraditional methods of rehabilitation. What does that mean?

It means No Drugs, No Doctors, No Problem.

BECOME A SPONSOR UNITE & FIGHT Yes!!! I would like to make a contribution to your organization. My donation selection and method of support is located below. I understand that your organization is a non-profit and that my contribution is tax deductible. Name: _________________________________________. Address: _______________________________________. City:___________. State:__________.

ZIP:__________.

Enclosed please find my support in the amount of: $__________. Cash___. Credit___. Check___. Money Order___. Acc Number:___________________. Signature:_____________________.

130 DEGREE HEAT

Dog-tag is a registered trademarked company all rights reserved.

For more info about us go to DOGTAG.COM

NOTHING GOOD TO EAT YESTERDAY’S IED ATTACK NOT KNOWING WHATS AROUND THE CORNER HOW DID I END UP HERE? THIS PLACE IS SCARY

WILL I SEE MY FAMILY AGAIN?

EVERY CHALLENGE. EVERY BATTLE. EVERY HEART.

UNITE & FIGHT BRING PETS TO VETS

Exp Date:____.

Pets Improve Your Mood

Pets Stave Off Loneliness and Provide Unconditional Love

Pets Encourage You To Get Out And Exercise

Pets Control Blood Pressure Better Than Drugs

Pets Can Help With Social Support

Pets Can Reduce Stress— Sometimes More Than Humans

The average monthly cost to house, feed, and give medical attention to animals in a shelter is about $1,000 The information above was collected from clinical studies preformed at Cornell University.

WILL I SEE MY FAMILY AGAIN?


Images from left to right: investor package with business card envelope, metal dog-tag, cross-fold informational packet, magazine ad, billboard advertisement, Website.


BookBook BookBook is a used college textbook company which I developed; media consists of an identity package, advertising campaign, and interactive web site.

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FAX

Title: Mr Skipper Condon Description: Text Rental Invoice Number: 0001 Term: 30 Days

Mr Skipper Condon 2201 Ion ave Sullivan’s Island, SC 29482

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Fee Summary: Item Days General Biology 3rd ed 30 Anatomy & Physiology 60 Subtotal

Amount Paid

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Name: Je

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Renting textbooks has never been so easy. Why pay full price, you can save up to 80% renting from bookbook. bookbook gives you free shipping on all orders and a 30 day 100% money back guarantee.

Images from left to right: BookBook hat, employee uniform, bookmark, magazine advertisement, vertical billboard advertisement, and Website.

rent. save. return.

book book.com

book book .com

rent. save. return .


20 2012

REDUX

THE NIGHTMARE CONTEMPORARY ART SHOW

MARCH

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The Nightmare This wide format poster features a contemporary rendition of the Romantic painting by Fuselli called The Nightmare; the piece would highlight a contemporary art show at a local gallery.


20 2012

REDUX

THE NIGHTMARE CONTEMPORARY ART SHOW

MARCH

On the right: original artwork by Fuselli


Reformation This poster was created in response to an unconstitutional immigration law that was passed by the state of Arizona. The law, SB1070, denies the immigrant population of Arizona the basic freedoms in which they are entitled.

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Typeface: Kremlin Minister

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MoJo Bars Clif is an energy-bar company that caters to a physically active demographic. A recently-developed product, called MoJo bars, suits the nutritional requirements of both lesser-active individuals and athletes. The sequential magazine advertisement I created targets people of varying energy requirements in a humorous manner. .

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Poster Design Each of these four Charleston posters was created for various event contests for year 2012. From left to right: Charleston Art Culture History, Charleston Harbor Fest, Charleston Wine and Food Festival, and Charleston Cooper River Bridge Run.

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experience

CHARLESTON art * culture * history


The Butcher Shoppe Created for the New York Butcher Shoppe, this mass mailing advertisement utilizes a grotesque, yet engaging image of meat lying upon classic butcher-style paper. A punch card for subsequent purchases was created to pique the interest of potential customers.

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A night to re ember October 31st,m 2012 { Charleston, SC

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THE BRAIN

VITAL SIGNS

Brain injured patients who lose their past often also lose their future.

Discover Discover magazine pertains to science, technology and the future. The current issue required a style and design update; the layout samples feature my proposed re-design masthead and layout.

A girl can speak at home but goes mute everywhere else.

FUTURE TECH

Computers could make driving idiotproof, if we’d just let them.

Science, Technology, and The Future

CRUNCHING THE UNIVERSE

New sky surveys will catalog billion of astronautical objects.

S i l e n t Wa r r i o r

A helmet that can read and transmit a soldiers thoughts.

I l l Wi n d B l o w i n g

Contaminants waft from Asian factories across the Pacific.

CHINA SYNDROME 1,400 TONS OF MERCURY HEADING YOUR WAY

M e n t a l T i m e Tr a v e l B i o l o g y ’s L o s t G e n i u s

APRIL 2011

$ 5.99

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DISCOVERMAGIZINE.COM

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APRIL | 2011

1


Data

Accidental Paleontology by Linda Marsa

THIS OVER SIZED SALT SHAKER ACTUALLY DETECTS DARK MATTER

I

n the fall 2009, bulldozers being in preparation for construction of a new power station in arid San Timoteo canyon south east of Los Angeles unearthed some fossilized snails. Obscure provisions in California’s top environmental laws require that scientists be dispatched to construction sites in geologically promising areas, so utility company Southern California Edison had a team of paleontologists standing by. As the researchers sifted through the soil. The magnitude of the fine slowly became clear: the canyon reveals a trove of thousands of animal and plant awful that were more than 1.4 million years old. The fossils were quickly estimated, jacketed and plaster, then shipped to a nearby lap for ongoing cleaning and analysis for the construction could continue. Among the largest and most complete specimens in the new collection are a giant ancestor of the saber tooth tiger, round slots the size of grizzly bears, two types of camel and new deer and horse species. “ it was extremely exciting to come across a rare find,” says Philiippe Lapin, one of the paleontologist with the Southern California Edison team. “ the number of fossils was beyond our expectations,” he says. Thomas Demere,

curator of the department of paleontology at the San Diego natural history museum, says that because these fossils are from an earlier epoch that most others found in the region, we will help

much about the tree of life here were one organism existed, when they arrived, and how they evolved. Not for the strong California laws protecting the paleontologist resources that the site, discoveries might never have happened. Most

A MINES SECOND LIFE THE

moment scientists and engineers inspect a cavern nearly a mile beneath the surface at the Stamford Underground Laboratory at Homestake in Lead, South Dakota. Homestake once posted the largest gold of them in the western hemisphere and

6

with the deepest mind and United States, reaching down more than 8000 feet. After the mine closure was announced in 2000, researchers successfully petitioned to turn into a lab. The site has contributed to science before: from 1965 until late 1990s, based cavern mt

and noble peace prize winning neutrino experiment. A lab recently expanded the space, removing 17,000 tons of rock to prepare for the installation of a large underground xenon detector, which will search for dark matter particles.

of us think of determined bone hunters digging up paleontological treasure on dedicated expeditions and exotic locals, but that is that many fossils turn up quite by chance. Construction projects, which sit through tremendous amo unts of dirt and rock while digging foundations or laying roads, are an epically rich source of these happy accidents. In 2009, for instance, builders erecting a seawall in Santa Cruz, California, uncovered 3 whales, two porpoises, and other marine life from 12 million to 15 million years ago, one recent expansion of the Caldecott Tunnel Near Berkeley California, yielded extinct camels, rhinos, and giant wolverines. In 2006 construction for a parking garage for the Los Angels County Museum of Art revealed a prehistoric lion skull, dire wolves, and a near complete mammoth skeleton from the last ice age, roughly 40,000 to 100,000 years ago. And last October, a bull dozer operator working on a reservoir expansion project in Colorado found a juvenile mammoth. Subsequent excavation in Colorado exposed at least eight mastodons, three over sized mammoths/ extinct bison, and a 9 foot sloth; researchers hope to return to the site to continue digging this sprint.”We find fossils about 85 percent of the time on construction sites.” Says paleontologist Lanny Fisk, president of PaleoResource Consultants, an Auburn, California, outfit that specializes in preserving fossil remains. Fisk and other paleontologists estimate that more than half of all new fossils in the country come from construction sites, and in states like California with powerful regulations. That figure may be as high as 70 percent. A 2009 federal law, the Paleontological Resources Preservation Act, aims to protect fossils uncovered during development of federal land. Previously, a patchwork of laws including the Antiquities Act of 1906 and the federal land policy and management act of 1976 protected objects of historic and scientific interest on land owned by the federal government, but there was no clear directive for handling fossils. “the intent was to take the hodge podge of laws that we were using and create a more uniform approaching to managing paleontology resources on federal lands,” says Patricia Hester, a paleontologist in Albuquerque who oversees the western region of the Bureau of Land Management, one of the federal agencies responsible for enforcing the new law. “Now,” she says. “when you’re doing work on public land in an area that’s likely to have fossil resources, you have to show how you’re going to deal with them,” a process known as mitigation paleontology.

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The Spine of a Dire wolf found the construction site.

Geology is the best indicator of promising fossil beds, so before a development project gets underway, paleontologists assess the location. Sedentary rock such as sandstone and shale, created from layers of deposited material, does an especially good job of preserving animal and plant remains. The experts also review whether nearby or similar geological formations Manuel Examining the remains of a Tiger. have produced specimens. Evaluating all this information, they give the site a score for its fossil potential. If it receives a high rating, the scientists develop a mitigation plan for cleaning, sorting, and analyzing any fossils that turn up, and professional monitors stay on location to observe construction work. Still, the new law applies only to federal land, which makes up about thirty percent of the country’s area. Many states, especially fossil-rich ones like Colorado, North Dakota, and Utah, have their own rules about fossil salvage, but enforcement is spotty at best, even on state-owned property, Fisk says. And on private lands, fossil finds are all but totally unregulated nationwide. “We almost always make major discoveries of new species when construction sites are properly supervised, which suggests that in unregulated areas, we”re losing resources forever,” he says.

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CRUNCHINGthe

By Preston Lerner

DISCOVER MAGAZINE

APRIL | 2011

Data

UNIVERSE

7

by Carl Zimmer

Charting the Earth’s Chemical-Kissed Seas

J

The crew collected 4,600 water samples in three weeks from depths as great at 2.8 miles before mechanical failure brought the ship to a premature conclusion.

8

ust about every naturally occurring element churns through the earth’s oceans, yet scientists have only a glimmer of understanding of how these chemicals influence marine ecosystems. Now, a 15-year, 30-nation research collective called Geotraces is embarking on an ambitious global survey of ocean chemistry to quantify trace elements and shed light on how chemical concentrations fluctuate in response to changing environmental conditions. Last October, 32 marine scientists set out from Portugal on a planned 52-day transAtlantic expedition, the first American-led effort on behalf of the project. The crew collected 4,600 water samples in three weeks from depths as great at 2.8 miles before mechanical failure brought the ship to a premature conclusion. (A followup cruise is slated for later this year.) Of the 30 or so trace elements Geotraces scientists are studying, some-such as iron and copperare naturally occurring nutrients supplied by dust storms and deep-sea vents. These nourish phytoplankton and drive yearly bursts in regional productivity. The sampling also includes environmental contaminants such as mercury and lead. While tougher regulations have driven down lead levels does globally since the 1990s, mercury levels in the North Pacific Ocean have increased 30 percent over the last 20 years, potentially putting humans at higher risk of exposure from seafood. (See “Ill Wind Blowing, page 56). Researchers will also track radioactive isotopes such as tritium, a form of hydrogen, to better understand the ocean’s circulation systems and learn how they might be shifting in response to climate change. Scientists are busy planning six more global expeditions this year. “There’s never been anything like the breadth and scope of this project,” says Georgy Cutter, an oceanographer at Old Dominion University and one of the htree lead scientists on the recent trip, “It’s an inventory of the periodic table in the ocean.” JEREMY JACQUOT

DISCOVER MAGAZINE

Images from left to right: redesigned cover and masthead, original cover and masthead, redesigned spreads.

On the Origin of Societies

S

ocieties grow through slow, incremental change, but their collapse can be sudden and dramatic. That is one intriguing lesson from a recent study of diverse cultures across the Southeast Asia and the Pacific islands by University College London anthropologist Tom Currie. The research aims to settle a major anthropological debate over whether political systems develop the same way regardless of culture; the results suggest that some aspects of political development are in fact universal. To study societal evolution, Currie and his colleagues turned to the tools of evolutionary biology. First they used linguist similarities to create an evolutionary tree showing the relationships among 84 contemporary cultures, including the complex Balinese society of Indonesia and indigenous Iban people of Borneo. “It’s essentially

Fani Andelman, a neuropsychologist at the center, and colleagues gave the woman a battery of psychological tests to judge her state of mind. At first the woman seemed fine. She could see and speak clearly. She could understand the meaning of words and recall the faces of famous people. She could even solve logic puzzles, including a complex test that required her to plan several steps ahead. But her memory had holes. She could still remember recent events outside her own life, and she could tell Andelman details of her life up to 2004. Beyond that point, however, her autobiography was in tatters. The more doctors probed her so-called episodic memory—the sequential recollection of personal events from the past—the more upset she became. As for envisioning her personal future, that was a lost cause. Asked what she thought she might be doing anytime beyond the next day, she couldn’t tell them anything at all. The patient, Andelman realized, hadn’t just lost her past; she had lost her future as well. It was impossible for her to imagine traveling forward in time. During her examination, the woman offered an explanation for her absence of foresight. “I barely know where I am,” she said. “I don’t picture myself in the future. I don’t know what I’ll do when I get home. You need a base to build the future.” The past and future may seem like different worlds, yet the two are intimately intertwined in our minds. In recent studies on mental time travel, neuroscientists found that we use many of the same regions of the brain to remember the past as we do to envision our future lives. In fact, our need for foresight may explain why we can form memories in the first place. They are indeed “a base to build the future.” And together, our senses of past and future may be crucial to our species’ success. neuroscientist

ANDREW CURRY.

Neuro Science Beat

Workers observed huge discrepancies between his descriptions of monkey behavior and the experimental results captured on video.

Monkeys & Morality

A

cademic communities quaked last August when Harvard confirmed it found Marc Hauser, a cognitive scientist at the university, “solely responsible,” for eight cases of scientific misconduct. Hauser was a rising star whose studies of primate behavior seemed to show that the foundations of language and morality are hardwired into the brains of humans and our kin. But a document provided to the Chronicle of Higher Education indicates that Hauser’s lab workers observed huge discrepancies between his descriptions of monkey behavior and the experimental results captured on video. In October, the journal Cognition publish a retraction of a 2002 paper by Hauser; other journals issued corrections to two of his 2007 publications. All the same, Gerry Altmann, Cognition’s editor doubts the scandal will

flood of data. Buried in those numbers could be

answers to the greatest questions in cosmology.

taint the areas of inquiry in which Hauser made his names. “There have been many other important contributers to the field,” Altmann says. “He has been among the most prominent in part because of his research, but in part because of his ability to publicize.” Although Hauser expanded the idea of an innate moral grammar, he did not originate the concept. Moreover, much related research does not rely on monkey studies, which may be particularly vulnerable to confirmations bias - the unwitting tendency to interpret observations in a way that fits preexisting beliefs. It is not clear is that kind of bias is what caused Hauser’s troubles; he is on leave and not talking. Perhaps more answers will emerge in his upcoming book, tentatively titled Evilicious: Explaining Our Evolved Taste for Being Bad.

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Mind & Brain / Memory, Emotions, & Decisions The Brain Memories Are Crucial for Looking Into the Future Without remembering how the past unfolded, trying to plan ahead is “like being in a room with nothing there and having a guy tell you to go find a chair.”

One day not long ago a 27-year-old woman was brought to the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, sleepy and confused. the same way biologists use genetics to see how species are related.” He says. They then described each society’s political structure on a spectrum from loosely organized tribes up to begin testing different models of how they could have evolved to form the present-tree. The most successful models were those that prohibited the skipping of steps during a society’s rise, with each one passing sequentially through all the stages of increasing complexity. But it was possible to fall quickly, devolving from a state to a tribe without hitting intermediate levels on the way down. Biologist Mark Pagel of the University of Reading in England says the finding makes intuitive sense.” Cultural evolution is a lot like biological evolution,” he says. “You don’t start with a sundial and move straight to a wristwatch. There are a lot of small steps in between.”

}

observations are unleashing an unprecedented

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Digital sky surveys and real-time telescopic

at the University of Toronto, first proposed a link between memory and foresight in 1985. It had occurred to him as he was examining a brain-injured patient. “N.N.,” as the man was known, still had memories of basic facts. He could explain how to make a long-distance call and draw the Statue of Liberty. But he could not recall a single event from his own life. In other words, he had lost his episodic memory. Tulving and his colleagues then discovered that N.N. could not imagine the future. “What will you be doing tomorrow?” Tulving asked him during one interview. After 15 seconds of silence, N.N. smiled faintly. “I don’t know,” he said. “Do you remember the question?” Tulving asked.“About what I’ll be doing tomorrow?” N.N. replied. “Yes. How would you describe your state of mind when you try to think about it?” N.N. paused for a few more seconds. “Blank, I guess,” he said. The very concept of the future, seemed meaningless to N.N. “It’s like being in a room with nothing there and having a guy tell you to go find a chair,” he explained. On the basis of his study of N.N., Tulving proposed that projecting ourselves into the future requires the same brain circuitry we use to remember ourselves in the past. Over the past decade, as scientists have begun to use fMRI scanners to probe the activity of the brain, they have found support for his hypothesis. Last year, for example, Tulving and his colleagues had volunteers lie in an fMRI scanner and imagine themselves in the past, present, and future. The researchers saw a number of regions become active in the brains of the volunteers while thinking of the past and future, but not the present. Studies on children also lend support to Tulving’s time travel hypothesis. Previous work had shown that around the age of 4, children start to develop a strong episodic memory. Thomas Suddendorf, a psychologist at the

University of Queensland in Australia, designed a series of experiments to see if foresight develops with the same timing. In one experiment, published earlier this year, he showed 3- and 4-year-olds a box with a triangular hole on one side and demonstrated how to open it with a triangular key. He then swapped the box for one equipped with a square lock and gave the children three different keys. Most of the 96 subjects correctly picked the square key, regardless of their age. Then Suddendorf ran the experiment again, but with a twist to test the children’s foresight. Instead of choosing a key for the square lock right away, the kids were first taken to another room to play for 15 minutes; only after that were they offered a choice of keys, which they had to take back to the room with the box. The children had to anticipate what would happen when they tried to unlock it. This time Suddendorf found a sharp break between the 3-year-olds and the 4-year-olds. The younger kids were just as likely to pick one of the wrong keys as the right one. The older kids did much better—probably because, with more developed episodic memories, they remembered the square lock and used that knowledge to project into a future in which only a square key would unlock the box. a psychologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara, argues that the intertwining of foresight and episodic memory may help explain how this type of memory evolved in the first place. In Klein’s view, episodic memory probably arose in part because it helped individuals make good decisions about what to do next. For instance, it could have guided our ancestors not to visit a local watering hole on moonlit nights because that

Scientists have begun to use fMRI scanners to probe the activity of the brain, they have found support for his hypothesis.

KRISTIN OHLSON

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Vampire Chronicles Promoting a new image for the classic literary trilogy by Anne Rice, I illustrated three contemporary book covers that represent key moments of the narratives. With sleek type and vibrant color combinations, the viewer is inspired to ponder the meaning in each image of the literary works.

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55 Moons Three unique and beautifully-colored packaging labels comprise the marketing package for a new line of wine called 55 Moons; the line would be released by Grey Moon Estate Vineyards.

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Images from left to right: wine bottles with labels attached, font and back labels for each of the three wines.


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