Article:
Distributed Cognition in/at Work: Strickland, Lawson, and Ryan's SLIPPINGGLIMPSE

Abstract

slippinglgimpse by Stephanie Strickland and Cynthia Jaramillo stages a three-way conversation between poem-texts, with phrases appropriated from photographers, videographers, and programmers, with Paul Ryan's videography of dynamic fluid systems, with complex algorithmic interactions between text and dynamic images. The two main conceptual issues at stake here, as I see it, are 1) the relationship between human and non-human cognizers, and 2) the intricate play between dynamic and static systems. The first involves natural systems such as wind/water interactions, human readers/writers, and machine cognizers; the second involves emergent patterns amidst continually changing flux (and implicitly, electronic text vs. print). There are also meta-issues involving interactions between the two main issues, for example, how deterministic machine operations can nevertheless lead to emergent and unpredictable results, and how human cognizers excel in recognizing patterns amidst noisy systems (perceiving the emergent patterns as such).


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BibTex
Hayles, N. Katherine: Distributed Cognition in/at Work: Strickland, Lawson, and Ryan's SLIPPINGGLIMPSE. In: Dichtung Digital. Journal für Kunst und Kultur digitaler Medien, Jg. 10 (2008), Nr. 1, S. 1-2. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/17715.
@ARTICLE{Hayles2008,
 author = {Hayles, N. Katherine},
 title = {Distributed Cognition in/at Work: Strickland, Lawson, and Ryan's SLIPPINGGLIMPSE},
 year = 2008,
 doi = "\url{http://dx.doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/17715}",
 volume = 10,
 address = {Providence},
 journal = {Dichtung Digital. Journal für Kunst und Kultur digitaler Medien},
 number = 1,
 pages = {1--2},
}
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