Designed immediacy. Atmospheric experience in an affective-responsive environment

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DOI der Originalpublikation
Projekttyp
angewandte Forschung
Projektbeginn
2015
Projektende
2017
Projektstatus
abgeschlossen
Projektkontakt
Torpus, Jan
Projektmanager:in
Heibach, Christiane
Beteiligte
Simon, Andreas
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung
Exploration of the atmospheric potential and the affective connection between humans and their instrumented, responsive environments and development of corresponding artistic design strategies, user-evaluating ubicomp environments from a critical perspective, beyond pure application and usefulness. Participants experience affection and go through pattern recognition and appropriation processes.
Link
Während FHNW Zugehörigkeit erstellt
Hochschule
Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst
Institut
Institut Experimentelle Design- und Medienkulturen
Finanziert durch
Swiss National Fonds
Projektpartner
Finanziert durch
SAP Referenz
Schlagwörter
Artistic Research
Ubiquitous Computing
Internet of Things
Media Art
Media Theory
Fachgebiet (DDC)
Publikationen
Publikation
Affective-responsive Environments
(Zayed University Books, 2014) Torpus, Jan-Lewe [in: Proceedings of ISEA2014 – 20th International Symposium on Electronic Art]
This paper describes the concepts, media settings, strategies and methods of a media art work and an artistic research project. Both apply psychophysiological biofeedback technologies as affective interfaces between humans and artificial artistically-staged environments. The paper includes a comparison of media art creation with artistic research processes and intends to identify possible synergies.
04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
Publikation
Affect and Atmosphere in Controlled Responsive Environments
(Springer, 07/2016) Simon, Andreas; Torpus, Jan-Lewe; Heibach, Christiane; Navarro, José Javier; Streitz, Norbert; Markopoulos, Panos [in: Distributed, Ambient and Pervasive Interactions. DAPI 2016]
We explore the atmospheric potential and the affective connection between humans and their instrumented, responsive environments and develop corresponding artistic design strategies, evaluating ubicomp environments from a critical perspective, beyond pure application and usefulness. We have designed an abstract, cocoon-like, responsively mediated space and conducted a series of experiments with a total of 17 participants. Results show that participants experience affection, a coupling between themselves and the designed environment, and show strong cognitive engagement to understand and structure the environment through patterns of situation awareness and sensemaking.
04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift