Artificial Intelligence, Math / Truth & other ambigrams

by | Saturday, July 15, 2023

Lovers of mathematics relish challenges, enjoying the manipulation of numbers and geometrical figures, seeking and creating patterns. Their fascination sometimes extends into language and other seemingly unrelated domains. An intriguing example of visual wordplay, deeply linked to mathematics, are ambigrams, Ambigrams are a way of writing words such that they can be read in more than one way. They cleverly utilize the way words are presented, combining the mathematical concept of symmetry, the beauty of typeface design, and the study of visual perception to produce unexpected, creative patterns. For instance, here is a design I created this morning. As you can, hopefully, see, the design reads as “Artificial” one way and “Intelligence” when rotated 180-degrees. How cool is that!

Ambigram for Artificial Intelligence

A few years back Sailesh Shirali and Sneha Titus editors of At Right Angles, a mathematics education magazine, invited me to write a column on ambigrams and mathematics. My friend, Gaurav Bhatnagar, a bona fide mathematician, and I ended up writing 5 articles for the magazine. (That entire series is embedded at the end of this post).

More recently Sneha reached out to me wanting to use some of my ambigram designs for an upcoming issue. I was thrilled to see that they had chosen one my designs for the cover of the July issue. As she wrote, introducing the issue on FB:

‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty’ said Keats. And the July 2023 issue has some beautiful mathematics, which show how truth and math are synonymous. A special Pull Out on Proof, a new proof of the Pythagoras Theorem, a book review and a manipulatives review, deciphering a card trick using mathematics,…many delightful articles are yours for the reading.

You can access the entire issue by going here. Below is the cover (and an inside page describing the cover) in the magazine.

The idea of “proof” is one of the themes of the issue. So I wanted to share a design I had created before, but presenting it in a new way. This a chain-reflection ambigram of the word “proof.” I just placed a mirror next to the image of the design (as published in At Right Angles, back in March 2015) and took a photograph using my phone. As you can see the design looks the same even when reflected in a mirror, which is, of course, not true of the other words on the page.

The series of 5 articles (Of Art and Math) that that Gaurav and I wrote can be found below.

Powered By EmbedPress

A few randomly selected blog posts…

SITE 2008: A postview

We got back home from SITE 2008 (Las Vegas) last night and there lots of things worth posting but this will have to be brief. The keynote presentation by Matt and myself went of quite well. It was a gamble, an attempt at a creative mashup of presentations styles...

A (Wheatstone) bridge to the past

A (Wheatstone) bridge to the past

This is a story of serendipity. Of how an out-of-the-blue email request, about an article I had written over two decades ago, led me to rediscovering authors, books and ideas that I had first encountered back in my high-school days in India and have been deeply...

Design book-review podcasts

Design book-review podcasts

I am teaching a new masters/doctoral seminar titled Design in the real world. This is the first class I am teaching here after coming to ASU and it is exciting to back in with students engaged in discussions about design, technology, and its role in our...

Why I like naps

... because scientific research shows that sleep enhances creativity 🙂

49 Amazing moments of STEM: New article

49 Amazing moments of STEM: New article

The universe is made up of stories not atoms — Muriel Rukyeser (Image © punyamishra) Every educator has had an amazing teaching moment. It is that magical moment, when the topic comes to life and the energy in the classroom is palpable. These are moments that we...

TPACK @ AERA, 2009

I did not go to AERA this year - choosing instead to go to Chicago to Keynote the Engaging Minds: Pedagogy and Personalism, the 2009 DePaul Faculty Teaching and Learning Conference. We did have a paper to be presented there (and I am sure our Iowa State friends must...

Putting technology first

Don Norman has a great essay titled Technology First, Needs Last that I strongly recommend. We have been making a similar argument in some of our more recent pieces, see here and here... What do you think of Norman's ideas? Read it first and come back here to discuss...

PersonalDNA & cool survey tricks

I just created a personalDNA map for myself. Turns out I am a Benevolent Inventor... beats being a benevolent dictator I say! However, this posting is concerned not with what the survey found out about me but rather about what I learned about the survey. Let's get the...

James Kaufman on creativity: New article

James Kaufman on creativity: New article

Dr. James C. Kaufman is Professor of Educational Psychology in the Neag School of Education at the University of Connecticut and a highly-renowned creativity researcher. He is also a writer and playwright, having recently written the book and lyrics to the musical...

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *