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Human Trace

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Human Trace (Human-trace, Homme-Trace) is title of a scientific work written by Beatrice Galinon-Mélénec

In this work, Béatrice Galinon-MélénecBéatrice_Galinon-Mélénec explains that confusing the sign and the trace is an anthropocentric view and that "if any sign is, in fact, a "sign-trace", a trace is not necessarily a sign".

The latest scientific discoveries have led the author to propose a new anthropological definition spanning time: the Homme-Trace (Human-trace). Having observed that the notion of trace is used in disciplines whose subjects and methods often stand far apart, Béatrice Galinon-Mélénec has put forward some definitions resulting from anthroposemiotic research (signe-trace, signe-signal, echoing of traces, etc.). The propositions result from her own findings in professional situations of communication.

E-laboratory on "Human Trace"[edit]

The first part of the 21st century has been marked by the exacerbation of issues relating to the proliferation of traces associated with human activities (sustainable development, digital traces, health risks, protection of personal data and identity, cybercrime, etc.). The e-laboratory on Human Trace (founded by Galinon-Mélénec) brings together researchers who respond to these societal issues.

The question of the trace as a research subject in the field of complex systems, therefore, is a natural facet of multidisciplinarity. To avoid confusion when articulating the various approaches, the propostion is to gradually build an innovative form of research networks on the subject of "Trace", taking advantage of the framework established by CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin. The scientific objective is to show how the issue of the trace and its interpretation refer to complex processes. In the focus of CS-DC UNESCO UniTwin, this scientific objective leads to a strengthening of prevention of multiscale risks and contributes to the development of cooperation between different regions of the world. Considering inter-cultural and inter-consistent disciplines is likely to support research for a long time to come and as well as socially protecting the individual and the human species.

References[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Galinon-Melenec, Béatrice (2015). "From "TRACES" and "HUMAN TRACE" to "HUMAN-TRACE PARADIGM"". In Parrend, Pierre; Bourgine, Paul; Collet, Pierre. First Complex systems Digital Campus World E-Conference. Tempe Arizona USA: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-45901-1_36. Search this book on
  • Galinon-Mélénec, Béatrice (2014). "The future of the "Homme-trace"". Netcom (28-1/2): 107–130. doi:10.4000/netcom.1554.

External links[edit]


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