id |
acadia14_399 |
authors |
Ozel, Guvenc |
year |
2014 |
title |
Case For an Architectural Singularity: Synchronization of Robotically Actuated Motion, Sense-Based Interaction and Computational Interface |
doi |
https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.2014.399
|
source |
ACADIA 14: Design Agency [Proceedings of the 34th Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 9781926724478]Los Angeles 23-25 October, 2014), pp. 399-408 |
summary |
By fusing sensing technology, robotics and coding in unison with architectural form designed to move and reconfigure itself, a new kind of architecture that goes through a formal transformation in interaction with the user can be imagined and devised. Aiming to merge human presence with space through technology, this new architecture defines space as an extension of the human body and consciousness rather than one that regulates and controls it. |
keywords |
Sensing technology, robotics, consciousness |
series |
ACADIA |
type |
Normal Paper |
email |
|
full text |
file.pdf (5,681,969 bytes) |
references |
Content-type: text/plain
|
Ascott, Roy (1990)
Is There Love in the Telematic Embrace?
, Art Journal, 49:3, p. 241
|
|
|
|
Gottlieb Windisch, Karl (1784)
Inanimate reason; or a circumstantial account of that astonishing piece of mechanism, M. de Kempelen's chess-player; now exhibiting at No. 8, Savile-Row, Burlington-Gardens
, Gale ECCO, London, UK
|
|
|
|
Jackson, Peter (1998)
Introduction To Expert Systems
, Addison Wesley
|
|
|
|
Lynn, Greg (1999)
Animate Form
, MIT Press, Cambridge
|
|
|
|
Shanken, Edward (1997)
Technology and Intuition: A Love Story? Roy Ascott’s Telematic Embrace
, ISAST, Durham, NC
|
|
|
|
Von Foerster, Heinz (1981)
Observing Systems
, Intersystems Publications, Seaside, CA
|
|
|
|
Wiener, Norbert (1948)
Cybernetics, or Communication and Control in the Animal and the Machine
, MIT Press, Cambridge
|
|
|
|
last changed |
2022/06/07 08:00 |
|