non-peer-reviewedWith respect to digital technologies, noise is something that is at once both fought and sought. We may wish to minimise noise in communications but require it for encrypting the very con- tent communicated. We may wish to minimise noise when recording sound but also want to use it to improve the fidelity of the recording process. The catch is that noise is both an abstract idea and a concrete thing that does not sit comfortably in relation to systems that are deterministic/probabilistic, such as digital technologies. This is a fact that computer scientists know well but that is systematically overlooked in order to safeguard and improve the functioning of digital technologies, such as digital instruments. Indeed beyond the...
Noisy Fields: Interference and Equivocality in the Sonic Legacies of Information Theory discusses th...
This presentation considers noise in relation to intelligibility and inclusion. It considers it as s...
What is it about noise that attracted musicians and listeners over the past century? Noise Resonance...
With respect to digital technologies, noise is something that is at once both fought and sought. We ...
Ever since Claude Shannons’ ‘A Mathematical Theory of Communication’ was published in 1948 we have s...
Noise has always been a slippery concept, at once a sonic phenomenon and a concept that transcends s...
This thesis presents a processual ontology of noise by virtue of which morphogenesis (in its most ge...
This thesis aims to elaborate the theoretical and practical significance of the concept of noise wit...
non-peer-reviewedThe new work, Morphons and Bions (2011), is a realtime computer music work generat...
The phenomenon of noise has resisted many attempts at framing it within a singular conceptual framew...
The idea of noise is now widespread in many fields of study. However to a large extent the use of th...
My art practice is based on the study of machines. Instead of focusing on how machines usually work,...
A few years ago an interesting exhibition took place in Cambridge (and London) under the title ‘N01S...
This contribution argues for an ecological way of listening. It reflects on the possibilities and pi...
What is noise? Common sense tells us it is a disturbance, an invasion of our perceptual space, a nui...
Noisy Fields: Interference and Equivocality in the Sonic Legacies of Information Theory discusses th...
This presentation considers noise in relation to intelligibility and inclusion. It considers it as s...
What is it about noise that attracted musicians and listeners over the past century? Noise Resonance...
With respect to digital technologies, noise is something that is at once both fought and sought. We ...
Ever since Claude Shannons’ ‘A Mathematical Theory of Communication’ was published in 1948 we have s...
Noise has always been a slippery concept, at once a sonic phenomenon and a concept that transcends s...
This thesis presents a processual ontology of noise by virtue of which morphogenesis (in its most ge...
This thesis aims to elaborate the theoretical and practical significance of the concept of noise wit...
non-peer-reviewedThe new work, Morphons and Bions (2011), is a realtime computer music work generat...
The phenomenon of noise has resisted many attempts at framing it within a singular conceptual framew...
The idea of noise is now widespread in many fields of study. However to a large extent the use of th...
My art practice is based on the study of machines. Instead of focusing on how machines usually work,...
A few years ago an interesting exhibition took place in Cambridge (and London) under the title ‘N01S...
This contribution argues for an ecological way of listening. It reflects on the possibilities and pi...
What is noise? Common sense tells us it is a disturbance, an invasion of our perceptual space, a nui...
Noisy Fields: Interference and Equivocality in the Sonic Legacies of Information Theory discusses th...
This presentation considers noise in relation to intelligibility and inclusion. It considers it as s...
What is it about noise that attracted musicians and listeners over the past century? Noise Resonance...