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  • The cinematic floor -
    The cinematic floorArtist: Diana DominguesComment:
  • The Reengineering of Urban – Bioart and mHealth Enactive Affective Systems and Affective NarrativesArtist: Diana DominguesComment:
  • EVALUATION OF PHYSIOLOGICAL VARIABLES in an unusual context, that is, non-clinical or laboratory, using a T-shirt developed by undergraduate students in Electronic Engineering and Masters in Biomedical Engineering, with sensors capable of measuring...
  • The installation MULTIPLE voice/vision is the output of a research project in the arts, with as focus how friction between multiple layers of sound and vision can be a trigger for embodied perception. A multitrack registration—for both sound and...
  • „Sonic Antarctica“ features natural and industrial field recordings, sonifications and audifications of science data and interviews with weather and climate scientists. The areas recorded include: the „Dry Valleys“ (77°30’S 163°00’E) on the shore of...
  • Two Women -
    "Two Women" consisted of one computer station, two light boxes (58.4 x 60.3 x 20.3 cm), and two boxes (95.25 x 71.1 x 30.5 cm) each with three images revolving in response either to a timing device located in the computer or to user key-press at the...
  • Autobiography -
    "Autobiography" consisted of three light boxes and two computer stations. One computer displayed a Web site, which was created for "Autobiography". The other displayed the same material as the Web site, but provided a different way into these...
  • The essential component of wavy flow is the vortex. In isolation, a single vortex simply influences its surroundings to orbit around itself at a speed proportional to the inverse square of the distance to the vortex's axis. When a large number of...
  • Mark J. Stock's work is suffused with highly dynamic and detail rich imagery that is often indistinguishable whether it originated in the natural world or in a highly evolved virtual platform. Stock's process is algorithmically based; with his...
  • This work is a tribute to the Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai, whose woodblock print "The Great Wave off Kanagawa" (c. 1829-32) is not only one of the most-recognized pieces of Japanese art, but is also appreciated by turbulence researchers as an...