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April 14, 2005 01 h 01 min
April 14, 2005 24 min
May 12, 2005 52 min
February 4, 2005 01 h 18 min
October 17, 2007 49 min
June 27, 2007 01 h 12 min
July 11, 2007 48 min
September 12, 2007 01 h 07 min
September 19, 2007 01 h 13 min
September 26, 2007 01 h 00 min
October 3, 2007 01 h 12 min
October 10, 2007 01 h 10 min
October 24, 2007 50 min
November 21, 2007 57 min
Through my practice as a researcher, new media artist, and composer, I explore the spaces between experience and signal, investigating how art, computation, and mediation shape what can be felt, shared, and known. Through biofeedback, voice, and computational systems, I approach music and performance as emotional technologies that operate alongside the software and hardware of computational systems.
In this presentation, I revisit Jonathan Sterne and Tara Rodgers’ notion of the poetics of signal processing (2011) through the history of biofeedback music and my own artistic practice. I argue that biofeedback complicates conventional models of signal processing by placing living bodies, emotions, and social relations directly within the signal chain. Drawing on feminist science and technology studies, I use biofeedback as a lens through which to examine contemporary computational systems and their claims to immediacy, authenticity, and access to experience. Rather than attempting to resolve the distance between lived experience and its computational representations, I treat this gap as a productive site for research-creation.