Category Archives: Events

THE N0THING, SEEKING ANSWERS_   

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On 4th and 5th December C&R space in Deptford held performances of the work of  Elías Merino, Rian Treanor and Daniel del Rio with ‘three approaches to abstract computer-generated music’. They presented their project ‘The Nothing, Seeking Answers’ a multifocal installation, based on a set of unanswered questions, conceptual reflections and hermeneutics about abstract computer music and algorithmic composition.

The installation allowed for complete immersion within the varied soundscapes, set in darkness apart from the spill of light from the entrance, with the composers completely hidden from view.

Elías Merino, a composer and sonic artist presented an abstract composition of pure sine waves against,  distortion, fizzle and creeks, contrasting meditative sound against abrasive noise. He develops his work in computer-generated composition, electroacoustic music, soundscape and concrète sounds as an abstract and imaginary object away from the acoustic environment, processing sound through digital technology.

Atau Tanaka, Fiducial Voice Beacons: Action @ Science Museum Lates

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Wednesday 26th November 

20.00 – 20.20 and 21.00 – 21.20

@ Information Age gallery
Science Museum, Exhibition Road, SW7 2DD London, United Kingdom

Information Age is a newly opened gallery within the Science Museum which celebrates more than 200 years of innovation in communication and information technologies. Artist Atau Tanaka has been invited to respond to the newly commissioned artwork for the gallery, Fiducial Voice Beacons by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. Fiducial Voice Beacons is an interactive sound and light installation consisting of beacons situated within the ceiling of the Information Age gallery. Each beacon stores sound recordings that can be heard by visitors using an app on their mobile device. The sound recordings are voice messages that relate to information and have been collected from scientists, poets, artists and thinkers from the past and the present. Visitors are invited to interact with the artwork and to record their own messages thereby replacing the existing ones and producing a quasi-living archive.

In Lozano-Hemmer’s artwork the audience enjoy the relatively personal experience of listening to the audio content through headphones or the speaker on their hand-held device. Atau Tanaka, together with Rebecca Fiebrink, Steph Horak and Adam Parkinson (members of the Embodied Audiovisual Interaction (EAVI) research group) will present two unique performances that transform the usually localised listening experience of the work into a shared, collective event. Tanaka’s performance the installation will be “played” by the performers with the use of smartphones that are plugged into a sound system, creating a moment where the sound of the beacons is rendered palpable to a larger audience.

This event has been organised by MFA curating students from Goldsmiths, University of London.

Organic Systems at The Natural History Museum

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Image: Isomorphogenesis No.3 by Gemma Anderson

William Latham and Gemma Anderson are facilitating an ‘Organic Systems’ Drawing workshop at The Natural History museum as part of ‘The Big Draw’ – the world’s biggest drawing festival.

This is a rare opportunity to get hands on experience of the Natural History Museum’s collections to gain insight into evolutionary processes through drawing.

The event will take place on Sunday 19th October from 11am.

Latham  began his career studying Printmaking at the Royal College of Art (1983-1985) where he developed the ‘FormSynth’ method. He then worked as Artist in Residence with IBM between 1987-1993 which led to the ongoing ‘Mutator’ project http://latham-mutator.com and is currently Professor of Art and Games at Goldsmiths University of London.

Anderson also studied Printmaking at the RCA (2005-2007) and has been working in collaboration with scientists at the Natural History Museum and Imperial College​ since 2006​. She is currently Associate Lecturer of Drawing at Falmouth University, where she is also completing her practice based PhD (2011-2015) www.gemma-anderson.co.uk.
Anderson has adapted Latham’s rule based (algorithm) evolutionary drawing method ‘FormSynth’ to create ‘Isomorphogenesis’ an extended Organic Systems drawing process, which relates directly to the Natural History Museum’s collections. In this workshop Latham and Anderson will share their experimental drawing methods, which perform an analogue to morphogenesis.

Modelling a Community’s Health and Mobility Patterns with Mobile Phone Data

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This Thursday at 3pm (16th October 2014), Kate Farrahi, Lecturer in Computing at Goldsmiths University will be giving a talk on ‘mobility patterns and interactions sensed by mobile phones’ at Cambridge University.

This data provides a new source for many applications both in research and industry. In this talk, she will discuss two mobile sensed data-driven applications, one based on mobility patterns and the other based on interaction patterns.

Human interactions sensed ubiquitously by cellphones can benefit many domains, particularly for monitoring the spread of disease. A community of 72’s flu patterns have been collected simultaneous to their interactions sensed by mobile phone Bluetooth logs. The focus of this work is to determine the accuracy of incorporating interaction data into dynamic epidemiology models for infection prediction.

Kate (Katayoun) Farrahi is a lecturer at the University of London, Goldsmiths. Her research focuses on large-scale human behaviour modelling and mining, with special interest in data science, computational social sciences, mobile phone sensor data, and machine learning. Farrahi received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL) Lausanne, and the Idiap Research Institute, Switzerland. She has spent time as an intern at MIT and is a recipient of the Google Anita Borg scholarship, and the Idiap research award.

This talk is part of the Computer Laboratory Systems Research Group Seminar series.

Whitehead Lecture Series: David Westland

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The Departments of Computing and Psychology at Goldsmiths organise regular seminars by guest speakers throughout the academic year encompassing various aspects of cognition, computation and culture. All are welcome to attend.

 


 

Philosophical Ontology and Computational Models

4pm on  Wednesday 8th October in the Richard Hoggart Building room RHB137a at Goldsmiths College.

The second Whitehead lecture of the autumn term 2014 will be given by David Westland, Dept Philosophy, University of Durham, entitled “Philosophical Ontology and Computational Models”.

ABSTRACT: Models of computation (e.g. finite state machines, cellular automata) have been used extensively in the so-called ‘digital physics’ movement, as well as some areas of applied ontology. But their use has not extended very well to analytic ontology, where philosophers propose and attempt to answer general questions concerning the possible structures of reality. In this discussion he will introduce a domain of mainstream philosophy that is currently receiving a great deal of attention: the properties and laws debate. The basic problem of this discussion is how to understand the fundamental nature of predicates (e.g. ‘is round’) and their close connection to behavior (e.g. ’round entities tend to roll down inclined planes’). A dominant view, which is based upon David Hume’s empiricist philosophy, is that laws of nature are mere descriptions of the world, where the world itself is construed as a vast pattern of objects that are characterised by properties and relations. Importantly, advocates of this approach deny that causes ‘bring about’ their effects in any serious sense, such that there is no real explanation for the occurrence of a specific event. Common sense suggests that striking a match ‘necessitates’ its ignition, but the neo-Humean tradition proposes that the distribution of events is completely accidental. The aim in this discussion, however, is to support a rival position (termed dispositionalism), according to which the natures of properties are intimately connected with their behavior. So construed, properties are ‘active’ entities that are called upon to explain events. That said, he suggests that the dispositionalist project is subject to severe difficulties because it is presently committing itself to a ‘list’ conception of ontology. By this he means that philosophers are approaching ontology as a business of postulating what kinds of entity exist (i.e. dispositional predicates such as ’roundness’) and merely linking these entities up with certain truths (i.e. propositions of behavior such as ’round entities, ceteris paribus, roll down inclined planes’). The promising response, he argues, is to rethink the basic blueprint of a properties and laws ontology in terms of a finite state machine, where if-then imperatives are used to construct future times (modelled as outputs) on the basis of laws of nature (modelled as a transition table) and present times (modelled as inputs). The core idea is that this computational approach to ontology offers a favorable setting for understanding reality as a ‘self-active’ phenomenon, whereby the key dispositionalist notions of explanation and activity are properly realised.

 David Westland is currently based at the Dept. of Philosophy at the University of Durham, where he has worked closely with Dr. Sophie Gibb and – before his untimely death in January 2014 – the Internationally renowned metaphysician Professor E. J. (Jonathan) Lowe on the topic of ontological structuralism and natural laws.  David’s research has focused around modal issues in anti-Humeanism, dynamic theories of time, and the connection between computational models and analytic ontology. 


CONGRATULATIONS!

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Computing graduates celebrate their success at the annual graduation ceremony at Goldsmiths.

It was all smiles on the day where graduating students received their degrees watched by proud parents and friends. Teaching staff from across the computing department were beaming with pride, and loved posing for all the photos.

A special mention goes to Jack Hunt, from BSc Computer Science who came out with a First class result and is going on to study a PhD at Oxford.

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