Abstract

INTRODUCTION Simultaneous projection of multiple-images with audio, called here Audible Multi-Imagery (AMI), has grown rapidly since its inception in 1927. (Claude Autant-Lara of France is credited with being the first to use multiple images. He depicted a gold-hunting expedition to the far North.) Gradually, the medium of AMI has found its way into the programs of world fairs, federal government agencies, businesses, universities, schools, and the Association for Educational Communications and Technology conventions. AMI refers to the integral display of three simultaneously projected visual images coupled with a corresponding sound or audiotrack. Typically an AMI configuration comprises three 2 x 2 slide projectors, an audiotape recorder, three separate but contiguous screens, and a control system to advance the slides. There are many reasons for increasing use of AMI. It stimulates viewer interest, facilitates visual comparisons, and gives movement and continuity to still pictures comparable in many instances to a motion picture. AMI can be produced

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