Institute of Experimental Design and Media Cultures

Dauerhafte URI für die Sammlunghttps://irf.fhnw.ch/handle/11654/19

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Ergebnisse nach Hochschule und Institut

Gerade angezeigt 1 - 10 von 47
  • Publikation
    Rewriting FAIRness
    (Critical Media Lab, IXDM, Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst Basel FHNW, 07.05.2024) Pritchard, Helen; Bruder, Johannes; Weinmayr, Eva; Kolb, Lucie; Munforte, Patrizia
    99 - Sonstiges
  • Publikation
    Data Management Planning
    (Critical Media Lab, IXDM HGK Basel FHNW, 04.03.2024) Solveig Qu Suess; Bruder, Johannes; Pritchard, Helen; Weinmayr, Eva; Femke Snelting; Kolb, Lucie; Munforte, Patrizia
    99 - Sonstiges
  • Publikation
    Holding Rivers, Becoming Mountains
    (Christoph Merian Verlag, 2024) Bruder, Johannes; Suess, Solveig Qu; Perren, Claudia; Latimer, Quinn
    04A - Beitrag Sammelband
  • Publikation
    Specters of Potential Energy
    (Genesis Art Gallery, 25.11.2024) Bruder, Johannes; Suess, Solveig Qu; Aslanishvili, Tekla; Duncan, Ifor; He, Pianpian; Aroshvili, Aleksandra; Gambino, Eveline; Sharma, Ishita; Wang, Naiyi
    14 - Ausstellungsbeitrag
  • Publikation
    Of demons, geniuses, and the rat man
    (Routledge, 25.03.2011) Bruder, Johannes
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
  • Vorschaubild
    Publikation
    KI als Medium und ›message‹ und die (Un-)Möglichkeit einer queeren Antwort
    (Transcript, 2022) Bruder, Johannes; Michael Klipphahn-Karge; Ann-Kathrin Koster; Sara Morais dos Santos Bruss
    Johannes Bruder untersucht in seinem Beitrag die konstitutiven Ein- und Ausschlüsse von autistischer Subjektivität und Kognition im Kontext von künstlicher Intelligenz. Während autistische Kognition in Fantasien von zukünftiger KI als konstitutives Anderes fungiert, waren und sind autistische Individuen essenzieller Bestandteil der kognitiven Infrastruktur von real existierender KI - ob als Testobjekte, Coder, oder Data Worker. Diese Dynamiken von Ein- und Ausschluss sind nicht neu, sondern gesellschaftlich fest verankert; autistische Aktivist*innen haben dementsprechend Strategien entworfen, sich selektiven Ein- und Ausschlüssen performativ zu entziehen. Im Text versucht Johannes Bruder diese Strategien für eine Antwort auf die Medientheorien zeitgenössischer AI fruchtbar zu machen.
    04A - Beitrag Sammelband
  • Publikation
    You wasted a good crisis! Paranoia, speculation and discipline in finance
    (Wayne State University Press, 2023) Bruder, Johannes
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
  • Publikation
    The Rewrite
    (Het Nieuwe Instituut, 2022) Bruder, Johannes; Engelmann, Sasha; Aquije, Gabriela; Sobecka, Karolina; Bazdyrieva, Asia; Williams, Rhys; Krzykowski, Matylda
    14 - Ausstellungsbeitrag
  • Vorschaubild
    Publikation
    Donkey Kong's Legacy. About Microprocessors as Model Organisms and the Behavioral Politics of Video Games in AI
    (Universität Bern, 2021) Bruder, Johannes
    The article discusses forms of contamination between human and artificial intelligence in computational neuroscience and machine learning research. I begin with a deep dive into an experiment with the legacy microprocessor MOS 6502, conducted by two engineers working in computational neuroscience, to explain why and how machine learning algorithms are increasingly employed to simulate human cognition and behavior. Through the strategic use of the microprocessor as “model organism” and references to biological and psychological lab research, the authors draw attention to speculative research in machine learning, where arcade video games designed in the 1980s provide test beds for artificial intelligences under development. I elaborate on the politics of these test beds and suggest alternative avenues for machine learning research to avoid that artificial intelligence merely reproduces settler-colonialist politics in silico.
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift
  • Vorschaubild
    Publikation
    Letter from the editors: Lost & Found
    (Continent, 2016) Bruder, Johannes; Gerloff, Felix; Allen, Jamie
    This issue was found in the lost conversations of continent.’s Jamie Allen and guest editors Johannes Bruder and Felix Gerloff. It is the crystallization of interests in the empirical, in notions of ‘evidence’, and the act of ‘returning’ something from a site of investigation. Developed through the Swiss National Science Foundation project Machine Love?[1], a project by researchers from the Institute of Experimental Design and Media Cultures at the Academy of Art and Design FHNW[2] (Claudia Mareis, Johannes Bruder and Felix Gerloff), these articles and artefacts stem in part from a workshop (All Eyes on Method in Basel on the 4th and 5th of June 2015) attended by contributing authors Sarah Benhaïm, Hannes Krämer, Luis-Manuel Garcia, Priska Gisler and Stefan Solleder. We also sought to expand the constituency of this continent. issue through a discussion of the role that media artefacts and material objects play in empirical research more generally. We have reached out to thinkers and doers who have developed ways of productively navigating the ambiguities of losing and finding, forgetting and remembering, capturing and deleting. Works by Geraldine Juarez, Mara Mills, Verena Paravel and Lucien Castaing-Taylor with a response by Nina Jäger and Bronwyn Lay, Natasha Schüll, and the Times of Waste research team further elaborate the thematic of ‘Lost & Found’ for this issue. We (re)present here attempts to (re)create experience, waving our flag of surrender at a world that is forever slipping through our fingers.
    01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift