In a previous work (Lucchiari and Folgieri, 2015) we considered communication among young people. New digital-natives do not communicate in a traditional way, but they choose different means and ways. It is not a surprising conclusion that a large part of digital-natives considers obsolete both Web sites’ structure and Internet navigation modes, learning instruments and paradigms and communication tools, choosing, instead, fast and immediate media like mobile phone communication, social networking and so on (Croitoru et al. 2011). Notwithstanding we could think they lack of communication skills, actually, they communicate with each other much more than ever done, using not only the verbal language, but also images, videos, sounds, and especially emotions. We named this phenomenon telepatheia or, better, sympateia, meaning that they seem to keep in contact independently by the mean. Of course, on our intention, this does not mean that we are observing a new organic evolution, but surely a kind of evolution can be traced: an era in which human and machines are evolving, influencing one each other, determining a specific kind of communication strongly influenced and related to technology. In this paper, starting from our previous studies and from our concept of “sympateia”, we performed a new experiment related to brain rhythms synchronization. Through our experiment, described in the following chapter, We want to explore the communication mechanisms of telepathy (in the ancient Greek assumption of “telepatia”that is [tele]=”distance” and [pateia]=”emotion, feeling”). This does not mean that we are trying to make humans telepathic, but we aim to deeply understand communication mechanisms among humans through human-computer interaction BCI devices. This means to change the point of view of brain and Information Technology researches, stressing the point of view of self-understanding of the own brain.
Brainwaves and Sound Synchronization in a Dance Performance / F. Soave, R. Folgieri - In: Electronic Visualisation & the Arts : Proceedings / [a cura di] J.P. Bowen, J. Weinel, G. Diprose, and N. Lambert. - [s.l] : BCS, 2018. - pp. 117-119 (( convegno EVA tenutosi a London nel 2018 [10.14236/ewic/EVA2018.22].
Brainwaves and Sound Synchronization in a Dance Performance
R. Folgieri
Methodology
2018
Abstract
In a previous work (Lucchiari and Folgieri, 2015) we considered communication among young people. New digital-natives do not communicate in a traditional way, but they choose different means and ways. It is not a surprising conclusion that a large part of digital-natives considers obsolete both Web sites’ structure and Internet navigation modes, learning instruments and paradigms and communication tools, choosing, instead, fast and immediate media like mobile phone communication, social networking and so on (Croitoru et al. 2011). Notwithstanding we could think they lack of communication skills, actually, they communicate with each other much more than ever done, using not only the verbal language, but also images, videos, sounds, and especially emotions. We named this phenomenon telepatheia or, better, sympateia, meaning that they seem to keep in contact independently by the mean. Of course, on our intention, this does not mean that we are observing a new organic evolution, but surely a kind of evolution can be traced: an era in which human and machines are evolving, influencing one each other, determining a specific kind of communication strongly influenced and related to technology. In this paper, starting from our previous studies and from our concept of “sympateia”, we performed a new experiment related to brain rhythms synchronization. Through our experiment, described in the following chapter, We want to explore the communication mechanisms of telepathy (in the ancient Greek assumption of “telepatia”that is [tele]=”distance” and [pateia]=”emotion, feeling”). This does not mean that we are trying to make humans telepathic, but we aim to deeply understand communication mechanisms among humans through human-computer interaction BCI devices. This means to change the point of view of brain and Information Technology researches, stressing the point of view of self-understanding of the own brain.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
ewic_eva18_rw_paper3.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: Articolo
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione
364.32 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
364.32 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
EVA_short_paper.pdf
accesso aperto
Descrizione: versione accettata dall'editore
Tipologia:
Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Dimensione
72.62 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
72.62 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.