communication – Radical Atoms https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en Ars Electronica Festival 2016 Tue, 28 Jun 2022 13:26:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.6 Prix Forum II – Digital Communities https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en/prixforum2/ Tue, 02 Aug 2016 14:25:20 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/?p=931

The Prix Forums furnish an extraordinary opportunity to festivalgoers—a chance to meet the human beings behind the works of art. Here, you can enjoy up-close-and-personal encounters with the artists honored by the Prix Ars Electronica and the jurors who made the selections. In formal speeches and casual conversations, you can find out more about the works, the ideas behind them, and the challenges the artists responded to. The Digital Communities Forum is dedicated to the social consequences of global interconnection via digital networks.

The Prix Forums are produced by the European Digital Art and Science Network.

Speakers

Winners

Stacco Troncoso (ES)
P2P Foundation, Golden Nica of 2016 Prix Ars Electronica in the Digital Communities category

Paul Feigelfeld (AT), Caoimhe Gallagher (IR)
Award of Distinction of 2016 Prix Ars Electronica in the Digital Communities category. Project: Refugee Phrasebook

Nakano Hitoyo (JP)
Award of Distinction of 2016 Prix Ars Electronica in the Digital Communities category. Project: SAZAE bot

Moderation

Sarah Kriesche (AT)
Journalist and jury member of the 2016 Prix Ars Electronica

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Participation and Political Socialization in the Age of New Media https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en/politikneuemedien/ Mon, 01 Aug 2016 11:10:21 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/?p=2525

An event produced jointly by the Upper Austria Teacher-Training College, Upper Austria Chamber of Labor and the Ars Electronica EducationLab

For several years now, new social media have been changing how people communicate and thus our everyday life. Especially among young people, these media now constitute a central part of their lived reality. Even our political discourse is increasingly conducted via Facebook, Twitter and similar platforms, which thus open up new forms of sociopolitical participation and socialization. The conference will confront this new reality and the challenges accompanying it, and scrutinize the impact of this development on political education. The offerings—in a variety of formats—include a presentation of the latest social developments and market research data, a methodological-didactic exchange of views, game modules, and a round-table discussion with prominent, expert panelists. This conference is being staged in conjunction with the 2016 Ars Electronica Festival, an encounter with key issues being raised by trends in social development that are the upshot of innovative technologies. Conference participants have the opportunity to take a guided tour of the festival venue. Participation is free of charge; preregistration is mandatory: www.ph-ooe.at/partizipation_2016

Read more about this conference on our Ars Electronica Blog!

THU September 8, 2016

1 PM–1:20 PM Opening
1:20 PM–1:30 PM Procedural remarks
1:30 PM–2:10 PM Speech: Participation and Political Socialization in the Age of New Media (Peter Filzmaier)
2:10 PM–2:30 PM Speech: Factors in Political Socialization from the Perspective of Two Young People (Peter Repczuk & Anja Engelbrechtslehner)
2:30 PM–2:45 PM Audience comments
2:45 PM–2:55 PM Procedural remarks and assignment to workshops
2:55 PM–3:15 PM Coffee break
3:15 PM–5:15 PM

Two-hour workshops

  • Workshop 1: DiY Democracy Repair Café (Florian Sturm & Tamara Ehs – IG-Demokratie)
  • Workshop 2: Current Internet Phenomena: Fascination and Prevention (Peter Eberle, Institute for Addiction Prevention & Tina Greul, student at HBLA–High School of Artistic Design, Linz)
  • Workshop 3: Virtual Reality – Das Erkenntnisspiel (Harald Prochaska, Otelo eGen & Martin Hollinetz, Otelo eGen)
  • Workshop 4: Social Media: Playground for Right-wing Extremism (Erwin Feierl-Giedenbacher, AK–Upper Austria Chamber of Labor & Hans-Christian Gruber, University of Salzburg)
3:15 PM-4:15 PM

One-hour workshops

  • Workshop 5: Focus on Compassion: Youth, Politics and Participation (Patrick Danter, Sapere Aude & Markus Luger, Otelo eGen)
  • Workshop 6: The “Arab Spring”: An Example of the Power of New Media? (Thomas Mohrs, PH OÖ teachers’ college)
  • Workshop 7: Utility of e-Learning Tools for Political Education (ZILLE Team, PH OÖ)
  • Workshop 8: Smartphones at the Nexus of Usefulness and Exploitation (Jakob Feyerer & Marianne Kapeller, PH OÖ & Hilde Zauner, AK OÖ)
4:15 PM–5:15 PM

One-hour workshops

  • Workshop 9: A Demoscopic Analysis of First-time and Young Voters (Peter Bruckmüller, SPECTRA)
  • Workshop 10: u19 Winners (Golden Nica u19 & Marion Friedl, Prix Ars Electronica)
  • Workshop 11: KulturKontakt Austria: Cultural Education and Participation in Social Life at School (Gabriele Bauer)
  • Workshop 12: NEET–Young People and Political Participation (Baldur Sailer, Association of Viennese Youth Centers)
5:15 PM–5:35 PM Coffee break
5:35 PM–6:35 PM

Panel discussion: Participation and Political Socialization in the Age of New Media

  • Elisabeth Wehling (University of California at Berkely)
  • Meral Akin-Hecke (Digital Champion Austria)
  • Simon Wesp (U-19 „Kameleon.ws“)
  • Peter Bruckmüller (SPECTRA)
  • Joachim Rathke (Schauspieler, Regisseur)
  • Moderation: Oberösterreichische Nachrichten
6:45 PM–7:30 PM Guided tour POSTCITY

FRI September 9, 2016

9 AM0–9:10 AM Procedural remarks
9:10 AM–10 AM Speech and discussion: Reflection, Orientation and Participation. Political Didactics and New Media, Thomas Hellmuth (University of Vienna)
10 AM–11 AM Speech and discussion: Political Framing and Opinion Formation in the (Social) Media, Elisabeth Wehling (University of California at Berkeley)
11 AM–11:15 AM Filmtrailer – Die Konferenz (PH-TV Team)
11:15 AM–11:30 AM Coffee break
11:30 AM-12:55 PM World Café
12:55 PM-1:40 PM Speech and discussion: Between Spectatorship and Deselection—Commitment as Event and Cocooning 2.0: The “Generation Crisis” as Challenge for the Political System (Beate Großegger, Institute for Youth Culture Research)
1:40 PM–1:50 PM Brief intervention: Evaluation
1:50 PM–2 PM Conclusion of the conference
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People Thinking Lab https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en/people-thinking-lab/ Mon, 01 Aug 2016 07:35:35 +0000 https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/?p=1974

A true revolution of technology is taking place in the stream of people’s everyday lives. The accumulation of new interactions between people and technology is creating a culture and shaping a new society. And that is how cultural and social innovations are initiated. At this year’s Ars Electronica Festival, which explores a new frontier created by “fusion” between the physical existence of the human world and physically-detached digital data, Future Catalysts (Hakuhodo and Ars Electronica) will set up the People Thinking Lab (a pop-up lab) to transform the festival site into a real-time experimental space, together with Hakuhodo Institute of Life and Living (HILL), an unprecedentedly unique institute that specializes in people analysis. The concept of the lab is People as Radical Atoms.

Program 1: People Thinking—Method-Sharing

The advance of technology is transforming people into a form that can keep changing radically. When we look at people as radical atoms, we can sense the initiation of new emotions and perspectives. People’s emotions may seem impromptu at times, but by finding the desire that lies deep down in the emotion we can get one step closer to the core of the desired technology and design.

For example, we have been accumulating People’s Long Data for more than 20 years, which is a pile of data that shows the changes in people’s emotions and sense of value. We deciphered the change in people’s emotion by analyzing such dynamic data, which allowed us to observe the change in people’s sense of value. In contrast, with the expansion of networks by the use of SNS, we were able to find that “people are minimizing relationships with others in their conscience and awakening love of oneself more than that for others.”

We also have a method called Unasked Questions, which we use to sense hidden emotions by analyzing people’s reaction when uncommon questions, whether verbal or nonverbal, are thrown at them. For example, in the research to find when people give up on a “frame of mind”, such as believing that Santa Claus is going to give them a present, wanting to ride a roller coaster, being excited about a new product, etc., we were able to visualize the change in motivation and conscience by their age.

We also utilize this emotion-sensing to predict our future lives. In this program we will present HILL’s unique method that analyzed the emotions of People as Radical Atoms for over 35 years.

Program 2:  Tomorrow’s View—Open Research Lab

Introduced by HILL this year, 100 Views of Your City is a bundle of future scenarios about the future city, which was predicted by analyzing the change in people’s sense of value. Even if the same technology is used as a function, a city might show a different view depending on the directions of people’s emotions when they are considered as Radical Atoms. For example, there are various possibilities for the future location of a grave, such as a real space in the local community, a virtual space, or not even a space but maybe embedded in the body of the bereaved, and all of these ideas are pictured in our subconscious. Based on 100 Views of Your City and using Shadowgram, developed by Ars Electronica, we will set up an Open Research Lab to write a new future scenario with the visitors to the festival.

Text: Takamasa Sakai (Hakuhodo Institute of Life and Living), Kazuhiko Washio (Future Catalysts—Hakuhodo×Ars Electronica)

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Casa Jasmina https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en/casa-jasmina/ Thu, 16 Jun 2016 17:27:41 +0000 https://starts-prize.aec.at/?p=475

Team Casa Jasmina

Casa Jasmina is a two-year pilot project in the field of domestic electronic networking, or “the Internet of Things in the Home.” The aim is to integrate traditional Italian skills in furniture and interior design with emergent skills in open-source electronics. The project is a showplace inside a large industrial building already shared by Toolbox Co-Working, Fablab Torino, and Officine Arduino.

Casa Jasmina has three main functions:

  • A real-world test bed for hacks, experiments, innovative IoT, and digital fabrication projects.
  • A curated space for public exposure of excellent artifacts and best practices.
  • A guesthouse for occasional visitors to Toolbox, Officine Arduino, and Fablab Torino.

Casa Jasmina was founded in order to encourage:

  • Makers, designers, digital artists, IoT experts, students, and universities to research, experiment, and use new technologies and new production methods related to open source and IoT.
  • Factories, industries, corporate companies, and start-ups to be interested in IoT and to try to overcome the boundary between classical and open source production. Industries that will create tomorrow’s living spaces.
  • Ordinary people interested in testing the IoT in everyday life in the house of the future.

Although it resembles an apartment home, Casa Jasmina is actually a combination of lab, gallery space, and B&B, so it needs dynamic management. Casa Jasmina is not merely a kitchen, library, bedroom, and bathroom. It’s a public interface for a larger Internet-of-Things process of building things, acquiring and installing things, removing things, repairing and maintaining things, storing things, recording and linking to things, and, last but not least, getting rid of things.

Casa Jasmina is an incubator, and its purpose is industry-boosting in the Torino and Piemonte IoT space. The successors of the Casa Jasmina project will be real homes with real, innovative products inside.

About

Team Casa Jasmina consists of the curators and mentors Massimo Banzi and Bruce Sterling, project manager Lorenzo Romagnoli, who is also interaction designer and maker, product designer and community manager Alessandro Squatrito, and blogger and mentor Jasmina Tešanović. During the year students or freelancers collaborate with the team on the project. Apart from the core team, Casa Jasmina is open to people from Fablab Torino (the first Italian Fablab) and their projects, Interaction and product designers who are interested in Internet of Things or open source projects. Casa Jasmina is active on the IoT council and organizes meetups and panels. The entire project is open source, anybody can visit Casa Jasmina, can be a guest, can try out all the projects inside.

Curators: Bruce Sterling, Massimo Banzi
Project manager: Lorenzo Romagnoli
Blogger: Jasmina Tešanović
Community manager: Alessandro Squatrito

Casa Jasmina is mainly supported by:
Arduino/ Genuino
Toolbox coworking
Fablab Torino
Casa Jasmina is also supported by:
Lavazza
Energy@home
Valcucine

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