pulsepool | Museum of Science, Boston |
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Place a finger to your neck or wrist. Find your pulse. How does it alter your awareness of your body? Imagine if you could simultaneously see and Pulse Pool is a collaborative multimedia installation created by the Symbiotic Computer Laboratory at the University of Oklahoma. The interconnected components of the Pulse Pool project explore how access to otherwise unavailable corporal information affects human interaction. Wearable electronic units measure individuals’ heart rates and transmit this data Pulse Pool is a 2006 commission of New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc. for its Turbulence website made possible with funding from mediaThe Foundation. Additional funding was provided by the University of Oklahoma College of Engineering, School of Computer Science, the Museum of Science, Boston, the National Endowment for the Arts, Rhizome.org, the University of Oklahoma Symbiotic Computer Laboratory, and the OU School of Art. | Created
by: With contributions from: | Brent Goddard Brent Goddard is an interdisciplinary artist from Oklahoma working primarily with video, photography, animation, and sculpture, and music. His interests span across a range of topics in the biological and social sciences, particularly those areas that tend to use information technology as a metaphor for explaining the relationship between the body and mind. These areas include portions of zoology, genetics, biological anthropology, evolutionary and cognitive psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, and cybernetics. More generally, he is interested in how an emerging worldview, informed by these disciplines, alters our self-image as individuals, as a culture, and as a species.
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