Sunday, December 9, 2012

[Yasmin_discussions] TwoNewExperimentsUsing'EEG'

[PT]

Olá,

Publicámos duas experiências recentes utilizando dispositivos ditos de 'EEG - Electroencefalografia'.

Experiência 1: Kephoise http://3kta.net/3kephoise.php

Experiência 2: EEGspiral http://3kta.net/3eegspiral.php

Saudações,
-------------------------------------------
[EN]

Hi,

We published two recent experiments using devices said of 'EEG - Electroencephalography'.

Experiment 1: Kephoise http://3kta.net/3kephoise.php

Experiment 2: EEGspiral http://3kta.net/3eegspiral.php

Greetings,


ANDRÉ RANGEL
Science and Technology of Art Researcher, UCP 2008
PhD Candidate, UCP 2008
MFA, UCP 2002
http://artes.ucp.pt/citar
..............................................................................
Member of the NAI - Research Group of Art and Intermedia
i2ADS - Research Institute in Art, Design and Society
http://i2ads.org/nai
..............................................................................
Art Director
http://3kta.net
..............................................................................

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

Re: [Yasmin_discussions] Latin America and Cybernetics at ISEA 2012

Alejandro Martin Maldonado, a mathematician and director the the
Biblioteca Virtual BLAA in Bogota, kindly sent an interesting text
to contribute to our dialog, the text is long so I decided to divide it in
three parts, here is the first one:

*
*

*Cybernetic design of the future *

Alejandro Martín Maldonado



I want to evoke some images from the panel about Cybernetics in Latin
America to think about what happened there:



(1) The kids looking at the labyrinth for animals.

(2) The artist (the scientist) looking at the artificial colony of insects.

(3) The "Torres del Parque", Salmona's residential unit constructed in
Bogotá, as part of the "constructivist" Latin American projects.

*In Pablo Colapinto's presentation about Second Order Cybernetics and its
relationship with Latin-American art*



(4) The design of the net of buildings that Rosenblueth designed for
Cinestav, and how it mirrored the composition of crossing the areas
proposed for the institution: mathematics, physics, physiology,
engineering.

*In Susana Quintanilla's presentation of the book she never wrote about
Cybernetics, Rosenblueth, Wiener and Cinestav.*



(5) The futuristic Government office with seven streamlined chairs with
buttons in the places for hands in order to make the decisions, but also to
provide the possibilities of modes of emphasis.

(6) The system proposed for the home televisions, so that people could
transmit their reception of the president's locution, to allow him to
receive the feedback and adopt changes even during the presentation.

*In Eden Medina's presentation about the cybernetic project Stafford Beer
designed for Allende's communist government in Chile *



(7) The Mexone robot surrounded by all the famous robots of the XX century.

(8) The graph with the different mathematical areas that can be treated by
Geometric Algebra

*In Eduardo Bayro Corrochano's presentation about Geometric Language for
Robotics*



(9) The four panelists: the researcher about art, the historian of science
and writer, the researcher about the history of technology, the
mathematician and robot engineer; the organizer: artist and researcher
about art and science; and the public, where I was sitting filming
everything with a camera.

*In the panel about Cybernetics organized by Andrés Burbano, at the Latin
American Day in ISEA, Albuquerque, "Machine Wilderness", 2012*



In Albuquerque, sitting in the audience, I had the sensation that something
happened there. That the event I witnessed was something unique. Since I
was filming I was not completely there. Now I have the opportunity to go
back and reflect on what happened, by seeing the videos of the
presentations, I can try to catch something of it, and by writing, I can
try to present a self-reflective vision of the moment.

It was my first time at ISEA, and since the beginning I was told this was a
particular ISEA. From the presentation of the Symposium, from the context
of New Mexico, from the first presentations, I began to go around to the
questions that ISEA is doing to itself: ¿What is ISEA about? ¿What kind of
art is the one presented here? ¿How does art think the issues presented
here?



But, as I saw the different presentations develop, for me, the real
question was:

*¿What is the future?* (¿How do we think/imagine the future?)

(The real issue of the "electronics arts" used to be *the future*)



And the first ingenuous answer was:

*The future is something of the past*



I was surprised by the revelation (something that may be common trade for
most of the people at ISEA) that the image we have of the future is an
image created in the past (in the recent past, but a past we consider
already in the past). It was a dream of the romantics, of the late XIX
century, that was imagined in the first half of the XX century, and fixated
by the science fiction of the 1950's and 60's.



The future had to be with streamlined buildings and furniture, with
screens, buttons, robots and computers.





On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 12:38 AM, Andres Burbano <aburbano@mat.ucsb.edu>wrote:

> Hello everybody,
>
> Sorry it took so long to get back to our conversation, I have been
> receiving several personal emails about the importance of this discussion
> however people seem to be shy when time comes to participate in the list. I
> will do my best to re-present some ideas and try to ignite the conversation
> again.
>
> In my opinion one of the most interesting things that happened in the
> panel about Cybernetics in Latin America at ISEA2012 was the encounter
> between the historian Susana Quintanilla and the scientist Eduardo Bayro
> Corrochano. Quintanilla is an expert on Rosenblueth's work and his
> collaborations with Norbert Wiener, she has been doing research
> on Rosenblueth's contributions to the definition of Cybernetics
> historically. Quintanilla also focusses on the impact of the Rosenblueth's
> ideas in the design of CINVESTAV the Center for Scientific Research and
> Advanced Studies one of the leading Latin American scientific
> institutions.
>
> Here a text by Susana about Rosenblueth and Wiener:
> http://www.infoamerica.org/documentos_pdf/wiener1.pdf
>
> Eduardo Bayro Corrochano interestingly currently works at the CINVESTAV
> in Guadalajara, he found shocking how close were some ideas,
> methodologies and procedures of Arturo Rosenblueth to his own work in
> computational geometry. Eduardo Bayro Corrochano is a worldwide authority
> in Geometric Algebra and its application to artificial intelligence,
> control and robotics.Here one of the links of books published by professor
> Bayro-Corrochano recently, it is possible to download the chapters
> individually:
>
> http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-84882-929-9/page/1
>
>
> I must say there have been few times in my life when I assisted to the
> cross pollination (in real time) between the knowledge of a social
> scientist and a scientist, this encounter was one of those times.
>
>
> BTW: Thanks to an interlibrary loan I requested the Encyclopaedia of
> Cybernetics and Systems, thank you very much Ranulph for such a precious
> information.
>
> Saludos
>
>
> On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 3:50 AM, Ranulph Glanville <
> ranulph@glanville.co.uk> wrote:
>
>> Dear All
>>
>> Let me add something Charles François was too modest to mention.
>>
>> He has published 2 editions of the International Encyclopaedia of
>> Cybernetics and Systems, a massive resource (which desperately needs to be
>> put not he web). This is seminal work in the presentation, dissemination
>> and sometimes marriage of the multiplicity of views of cybernetics and
>> systems.
>>
>> These great contributions meant that the American Society for Cybernetics
>> was able to award Prof François its Wiener gold medal a couple of years
>> back.
>>
>> I'm not sure this takes your discussion anywhere, but it does show that
>> someone working in Latin America did this great job that both synthesises
>> and maintains differences, a very cybernetic thing to do.
>>
>> Ranulph
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 10 Nov 2012, at 05:07, Andres Burbano wrote:
>>
>> > Dear Yasminers, Eugenio, Pablo, Esteban.
>> >
>> > Let me add some more interesting information before we start to work on
>> the
>> > connections between the topics exposed. Doctor Ranulph Glanville, an
>> > authority on Cybernetics, has been very active helping us inviting
>> people
>> > who can contribute our dialog about the "History of Cybernetics in Latin
>> > America". One of the persons suggested was professor Charles
>> > François. Charles François is a very influential Belgian / Argentinian
>> > expert on System Theory and Cybernetics who has been active in the field
>> > since the 50's.
>> >
>> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_François_(systems_scientist)
>> >
>> > Interestingly professor Charles François replied saying that because of
>> his
>> > advanced age he can not participate in the discussion, but he sent the
>> > following text as a contribution:
>> >
>> >
>> > "Around 1956, there was a very active group in Buenos Aires which was
>> > interested specially in Informatics (S. Lichtental), Biology (M.
>> > Valentinuzzi, who worked in the U.S. with Prof. Anatol Rapoport),
>> Medicine
>> > and Artificial organisms. Argentine and foreigners working in the
>> country
>> > did publish scores of original papers and, in 1969, an Argentine
>> Society
>> > for Cybernetics was created. This Society organized important meetings.
>> > In 1974, out of the Seminaries on Cybernetics organized on a practically
>> > permanent schedule by the Argentine Scientific Society (ASS), the
>> Institute
>> > for Cybernetics was born, as a division of the ASS. But the Institute
>> > unfortunately disappeared when Dr. Valentinuzzi passed over in 1983.
>> >
>> > In turn, Systemics was introduced with lectures given by Professors
>> Charles
>> > François and Armoza at the Catholic University of La Plata, Buenos Aires
>> > (1973) and at the Argentine Scientific Society (1976) These lectures
>> > whetted the interest of a number of members of the Institute for
>> > Cybernetics and led to the creation of the Study Group of Systems and
>> > Cybernetics (Grupo de Estudio de Sistemas y Cibernética) GESI, in
>> october
>> > 1976. It became, later on, the Argentine Society for Systems and
>> > Cybernetics, a Civil Association legally registered at the IGJ
>> (Argentina)
>> > recognized as the Argentine branch of the International Society for
>> Systems
>> > Sciences (ISSS) (1984) as well as a member of the International
>> Federation
>> > for Systems Research (IFSR), University of Linz, Austria (1984) and
>> > founding member of ALAS (Latin American Association of Systemics). From
>> > 1976 on, GESI's members actively started the diffusion of Systemics and
>> > Cybernetics, in the following ways:
>> >
>> > - Publication of booklets and pamphlets, either translations of foreign
>> > texts, or original works, and articles in the web
>> > - Organization of lectures and tutorials within the Association, or in
>> > Universities, public and private Administrations, Hospitals,
>> Enterprises,
>> > etc.
>> > - Organization of Seminars on a variety of specific subjects or
>> situations
>> > considered from an integrative systemic viewpoint
>> > - Organization of Systemic Meetings with the presence of noted national
>> and
>> > foreign systemists
>> > - Publication of the first Dictionary of Systemics and Cybernetics (in
>> > Spanish) in collaboration with the Andean Institute of Systems (IAS) of
>> > Lima, Perú. (1992)
>> >
>> > Members of GESI participate frequently in International Meetings and are
>> > also members of the board of various International Systems and
>> Cybernetic
>> > Societies and Journals devoted to the investigation and practice of the
>> > methodology. Its web site gives information of current research,
>> > bibliography, new publications, activities of systems institutions
>> > worldwide, and more. GESI encourages the participation of persons
>> > interested in the study and diffusion of the Systemic Methodology and
>> > Cybernetics. In view of the present generalized crisis in human
>> societies
>> > at all levels, GESI insists on the importance of the new and more
>> coherent
>> > view and reflexive action, , that the methodology based on Systems and
>> > Cybernetics offer."
>> >
>> >
>> > Thanks to Charles François and Ranulph Glanville.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 10:17 AM, esteban garcia <estebang@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> >> [Cybernetics in Latin America- ISEA2012]
>> >>
>> >> Dear Pablo, Eugenio and Yasmin suscribers
>> >>
>> >> In continuation with Pablo – Yes, Some of the members of Grupo de los
>> 13
>> >> participated in "Tendencies 5: Computer visual research. Conceptual
>> art"
>> >> taking place in Zagreb in 1973. The artists featured were Luis Fernando
>> >> Benedit, Arturo Berni, Ernesto Deira, Eduardo Mac Entyre, Rogelio
>> Polesello
>> >> and Miguel Angel Vidal. These artists were invited as "Grupo de arte y
>> >> cibernetica de Buenos Aires." In 2011, Margit Rosen (ZKM, 2011) edited
>> the
>> >> book about the New Tendencies movement, and how during 1961-1973
>> clustered
>> >> some of the earlier and most significant innovators in art, research
>> and
>> >> technology worldwide. The work of Berni is reminiscent of the early
>> >> computer art of Charles Csuri, using computer plotters and vector image
>> >> transformations. I did not find Benedit's work in this exhibit, but
>> perhaps
>> >> Pablo can find. I appreciate you sending your slides and the catalog
>> "Arte
>> >> y Cibernetica."
>> >>
>> >> Eugenio, in regard to your question:
>> >>
>> >> How has cybernetics specifically contributed to the development of
>> Latin
>> >> America, considered as a heterogeneous social space?
>> >>
>> >> As a Latin American, these stories shake me. I guess it is part of the
>> >> process "de-Westernization" to start looking towards ourselves, and
>> >> reflecting on innovations created for the Latin American context. A
>> >> criticism to Technology is that it widens the social inequity through
>> >> the *Digital
>> >> Divide*. In our countries, this divide is highly apparent and that's
>> why
>> >> Medina's research on Cybersyn is so fascinating. Cybersyn was a peace
>> >> technology and unfortunately an utopia.
>> >>
>> >> What do other's think? I am interested in how this histories are
>> preserved
>> >> through documentation, because otherwise how can we learn?
>> >>
>> >> Thank you,
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Esteban García
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> On Tue, Nov 6, 2012 at 11:49 AM, Eugenio Tisselli <cubo23@yahoo.com>
>> >> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> Hello Yasminers,
>> >>>
>> >>> I am Eugenio Tisselli, artist, programmer and PhD candidate at Z-Node:
>> >> the
>> >>> Zurich node of the Planetary Collegium. Andrés kindly invited me to
>> join
>> >>> this conversation, and I must say I'm very excited to be part of
>> this. I
>> >> am
>> >>> by no means an expert in cybernetics. Nevertheless, I have applied
>> some
>> >> of
>> >>> its principles to the study and the development of projects in media
>> art.
>> >>> In this regard, I believe that cybernetics is a particularly relevant
>> >>> conceptual tool that can shed light on some processes specific to
>> media
>> >>> art, such as interactivity or interface design.
>> >>>
>> >>> While I listened to the speakers of the Latin American and Cybernetics
>> >>> panel at ISEA 2012, I felt a mix of wonder and uneasiness. My wonder
>> came
>> >>> from learning about many things I did not know about: for example,
>> Arturo
>> >>> Rosenblueth's close relationship with Norbert Wiener, or Benedit's
>> work.
>> >>> But my uneasiness was due to an issue which I find a bit paradoxical:
>> how
>> >>> can we speak of the regional particularities of a scientific approach
>> >> that,
>> >>> as many others, raises a claim to universality? Of course, the
>> panelists
>> >>> spoke about specific people in Latin America who were involved in some
>> >> way
>> >>> or another in the birth of cybernetics. But I'm pretty sure that many
>> >> other
>> >>> people coming from other regions of the world participated too. Also,
>> I
>> >>> understand that, politically, there is a lot at stake: it's important
>> to
>> >>> stress that innovative scientific theories are developed with the
>> >>> contribution of people coming from outside the centers of political
>> and
>> >>> economic power.
>> >>> Thus, I see the issue of "de-Westernization" of science being raised
>> >>> here, and that's all very well. But the question I'd like to ask is:
>> how
>> >>> has cybernetics specifically contributed to the development of Latin
>> >>> America, considered as a heterogeneous social space? It has always
>> made
>> >> me
>> >>> a bit sad to think about Cybersyn, and how it was truncated by the
>> coup
>> >>> d'etat. I know that history doesn't allow "what if's" but... what
>> would
>> >>> have happened in Chile (and probably in neighboring countries) if
>> >> Cybersyn
>> >>> had become a reality?
>> >>>
>> >>> So, for me, speaking of cybernetics in Latin America is certainly
>> >>> interesting. But I would like to think more deeply about its social
>> >>> implications in the region (both as a theoretical approach and as an
>> >>> applied science) ... I'll be looking forward to ideas coming from the
>> >>> expertise of the people in this list.
>> >>>
>> >>> Best wishes,
>> >>> Eugenio.
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> ________________________________
>> >>> De: Pablo Colapinto <wolftype@gmail.com>
>> >>> Para: YASMIN DISCUSSIONS <yasmin_discussions@estia.media.uoa.gr>
>> >>> Enviado: Lunes, 5 de noviembre, 2012 10:26 P.M.
>> >>> Asunto: Re: [Yasmin_discussions] Latin America and Cybernetics at ISEA
>> >> 2012
>> >>>
>> >>> Hello Everybody,
>> >>>
>> >>> I am Pablo Colapinto, a cohort of Andrés Burbano at the University of
>> >>> California in Santa Barbara, and a researcher in "geometric
>> cybernetics"
>> >> --
>> >>> or
>> >>> form-finding and form-making using reasoning machines. Andrés asked
>> me
>> >> to
>> >>> moderate this conversation on Latin America and Cybernetics -- but of
>> >>> course I imagine we can all act as moderators and ask questions of
>> each
>> >>> other. Please feel free to contact me off list if any issues arise (
>> >>> wolftype@gmail.com).
>> >>>
>> >>> The text of my 5 minute talk and some of my research materials can be
>> >> found
>> >>> at www.wolftype.com/dl/cibernetica/ I believe Felipe shot a video as
>> >>> well.
>> >>>
>> >>> Esteban, thank you for the summary of the talks. I remember
>> afterwords
>> >> you
>> >>> were telling me something very interesting about a group of Eastern
>> >>> European cyberneticians that had some overlap with the themes
>> explicated
>> >> by
>> >>> El Grupo de los Trece in Argentina in the late 60s and 70s. We would
>> >> all I
>> >>> am sure love to hear more about that on this list.
>> >>>
>> >>> You asked if someone could perhaps explain a bit about Eduardo
>> >>> Bayro-Corrochano's talk, and I encourage those who were there to give
>> >> their
>> >>> impressions. Perhaps it would help if I speak a bit more about the
>> system
>> >>> of mathematics with which Eduardo works, since it is also my area of
>> >>> specialty. Andrés asked the question at the conference, but time did
>> not
>> >>> allow me to fully answer. My master's thesis has more in depth
>> >> introduction
>> >>> www.wolftype.com/versor
>> >>>
>> >>> Briefly, Geometric Algebra combines deductive reasoning with inductive
>> >>> reasoning. Deductive reasoning is the kind of "top-down" reasoning we
>> >> are
>> >>> used to in Euclidean geometry, where general rules lead to specific
>> >>> conclusions: a line intersects a coplanar circle at two points, two
>> >>> overlapping spheres intersect at a circle, two points can define a
>> >>> line, two lines can intersect to define a point, etc. Inductive
>> >> reasoning
>> >>> is more of a "bottom-up" approach to logic, where specific conclusions
>> >> made
>> >>> in one instance can be generalized and formulated into a more general
>> >> rule.
>> >>> A lot of the power of Geometric Algebra lies in its ability to use
>> >>> deductive reasoning to work out simple problems intuitively, and then
>> >>> inductive reasoning to generalize those solutions to more complex
>> >>> situations, whether they be higher dimensions or curved spaces.
>> Because
>> >>> Geometric Algebra is "coordinate free", which means it is not tied
>> down
>> >> to
>> >>> any particular metric space or dimension, what it enables is the
>> building
>> >>> of computational systems that are fluid, adaptable, and horizontally
>> >>> integrable.
>> >>>
>> >>> Eduardo's Cinvestav laboratory in Guadalajara is pretty much the only
>> one
>> >>> in the world using Geometric Algebra to study control and automation
>> of
>> >>> perception-action systems. Throughout the "Perception-Action Cycle"
>> >> which
>> >>> he discussed in his lecture fundamentally relies on the above model
>> >>> represent the world to the computer. He uses the same mathematical
>> >> system
>> >>> to control projective computer vision (seeing a 3d world), neural
>> >>> processing (recognizing objects), and robot locomotion and actuation
>> >>> (movement of robot arms). That a single mathematical system is
>> employed
>> >>> "from head to toe" in the design of humanoids is unique. I think of
>> the
>> >>> mathematics as an abstract substrate, a sort of soil out of which
>> seeds
>> >> of
>> >>> artificial intelligence can grow. It also is very very closely
>> related
>> >> to
>> >>> second order cybernetics as espoused by the likes of Heinz von
>> Foerster,
>> >>> where "seeing" is structurally coupled with "doing".
>> >>>
>> >>> "If you want to see, learn how to act." says Foerster. Of note, the
>> >>> geometric system mentioned above was invented in the 1860s by William
>> >>> Clifford, and brought back into modern day calculus by a theoretical
>> >>> physicist, David Hestenes. This provenance is relevant, for it shows
>> >> that
>> >>> some of our modern "thinking machines" are using the very mathematics
>> >> used
>> >>> to describe the nature of the universe itself.
>> >>>
>> >>> This is a somewhat truncated answer, but hopefully useful. I imagine
>> >> this
>> >>> conversation will continue on this list for some time, so hopefully
>> there
>> >>> will be plenty of time for us all to elaborate on various themes.
>> >> Looking
>> >>> forward to hearing what everyone has to say!
>> >>>
>> >>> Warm Regards,
>> >>> Pablo
>> >>>
>> >>> On Tue, Oct 30, 2012 at 5:14 PM, esteban garcia <estebang@gmail.com>
>> >>> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>>> Dear members of Yasmin,
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> I am Esteban García an artist and PhD candidate in Computer Graphics
>> >>>> Technology at Purdue University. I presented at ISEA 2012 a workshop
>> on
>> >>> web
>> >>>> radio called "Radio Chigüiro" and collaborated with Andrés Burbano in
>> >> the
>> >>>> panel "Code Talkers." I also attended to the exciting panel in
>> >>> Cybernetics
>> >>>> and here are my notes:
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Latin America and Cybernetics at ISEA 2012
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> This panel focused in past and current Latin American approaches to
>> >>>> cybernetics. Researchers in Artists, Neurologists, Politicians and
>> >>>> Mathematicians have explored cybernetics, "the scientific study of
>> >>> control
>> >>>> and communication in the animal and the machine."[1] Some of the
>> >>> approaches
>> >>>> included transposing different disciplines to create within a new
>> field
>> >>> of
>> >>>> knowledge.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Susana Quintanilla presented on an early case of the Latin American
>> >>>> influence in the development of a conceptual model for cybernetics.
>> It
>> >>>> started with the communication of Neuroscientists Norman Weiner and
>> >>> Arturo
>> >>>> Rosenblueth, starting in the 1930's and continuing throughout their
>> >>> lives.
>> >>>> Rosenblueth was a scholar born in México who in the 1930 was awarded
>> an
>> >>>> scholarship in the department of Physiology of Harvard Univeristy.
>> >> During
>> >>>> his lifetime, he co-wrote articles with Weiner including "Behavior,
>> >>> Purpose
>> >>>> and Teleology" in 1943, a seminal article that redefined the theory
>> of
>> >>>> cybernetics. Rosenblueth's return to Mexico as a Professor in the
>> >>>> Physiology department of UNAM didn't stop him and Wiener to continue
>> to
>> >>>> collaborate. They were able to maintain correspondence and co-author
>> >>>> research in the new science of cybernetics.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Pablo Colapinto's presentation regarded to "Grupo de los 13," an
>> >>>> Argentinian-based group of artists who in the 1970's explored
>> >>> cybernetics.
>> >>>> The work of Luis Fernando Benedit was highlighted. His work explored
>> >> the
>> >>>> development of autonomous systems. Benedit's "Biotron" was installed
>> in
>> >>> the
>> >>>> 1970 Venice Biennale, displaying an enclosed environment for bees:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> *
>> >>>> *
>> >>>>
>> >>>> *Biotron, an aluminum and plexiglas construction which housed 4,000
>> >> bees,
>> >>>> shown at the 1970 Venice Biennale. The insects had the choice of
>> >> feeding
>> >>>> from artificial flowers which dripped sugar at the direction of a
>> >>> computer,
>> >>>> or from actual flowers in a nearby garden. The bees preferred the
>> >>>> artificial solution.* [2]
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Pablo, can talk a little more about Benedit's work? It was a very
>> >>>> interesting presentation.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Eden Medina's presentation was called "Cybernetics and Political
>> Change
>> >>> in
>> >>>> Chile. Medina focused in the particular case of project Cybersyn, an
>> >>>> experiment in cybernetic socialism during Salvador Allende's
>> government
>> >>>> from 1970 to 1973. The presentation was based on Medina's book
>> >> entitled
>> >>>> "Cybernetic Revolutionaries" from MIT Press (2011) [3]. Cybersyn
>> >>> overlapped
>> >>>> science and politics aimed to be a socialist approach to
>> technological
>> >>>> innovation.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> In 1971, Fernando Flores wrote to Stafford Beer about starting a
>> >>>> challenging project to be implemented across the whole country. In a
>> >> note
>> >>>> by Medina:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> *
>> >>>> *
>> >>>>
>> >>>> *The person in charge of the technical aspects of the nationalization
>> >>>> effort had learned about cybernetics in college, especially a vein of
>> >>>> cybernetic thought known as management cybernetics that was in
>> >>> development
>> >>>> by an Englishman named Stafford Beer.*
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> A team that included Beer, aimed to create a National network for
>> data
>> >>>> processing using one mainframe computer. The goal was to achieve an
>> >>>> auto-regulated society. One of the highlighted examples, was a sketch
>> >> of
>> >>>> Project Cyberfolk, by Beer. Cyberfolk was a prototype of a system
>> that
>> >>>> could be installed in people's Television to give the government
>> >>> real-time
>> >>>> feedback about society. One of the notes on the bottom represented a
>> >> dial
>> >>>> with a meter to measure the overall levels of happiness of the
>> >>> population.
>> >>>> Medina explained that "Cybersyn illustrates how political innovation
>> >> can
>> >>>> lead to technological innovation.*"*
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Unfortunately, I couldn't be in Eduardo Bayro's [4] presentation. Did
>> >>>> anybody get to see it? Maybe Alejandro?
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> I tried my best to recollect from my notes, also I would like to
>> thank
>> >>> Eden
>> >>>> for sending me her notes about her presentation.
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Talk to all you soon,
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Esteban García
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> References:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> [1] Wiener, Norbert (1948). Cybernetics, or Communication and Control
>> >> in
>> >>>> the Animal and the Machine. Cambridge: MIT Press.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> [2]
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>
>> http://www.moma.org/docs/press_archives/4913/releases/MOMA_1972_0142_125.pdf?2010
>> >>>>
>> >>>> [3]http://www.cyberneticrevolutionaries.com/?page_id=2
>> >>>>
>> >>>> [4] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-2Hk3Gkuow
>> >>>>
>> >>>> --
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Esteban García
>> >>>> art & research
>> >>>> www.snebtor.org
>> >>>> _______________________________________________
>> >>>> Yasmin_discussions mailing list
>> >>>> Yasmin_discussions@estia.media.uoa.gr
>> >>>> http://estia.media.uoa.gr/mailman/listinfo/yasmin_discussions
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Yasmin URL: http://www.media.uoa.gr/yasmin
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>> "Set
>> >>>> Digest Mode" option and set it to either on or off.
>> >>>>
>> >>> _______________________________________________
>> >>> Yasmin_discussions mailing list
>> >>> Yasmin_discussions@estia.media.uoa.gr
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>> >>> _______________________________________________
>> >>> Yasmin_discussions mailing list
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>> >>>
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>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >>
>> >> Esteban García
>> >> art & research
>> >> www.snebtor.org
>> >> _______________________________________________
>> >> Yasmin_discussions mailing list
>> >> Yasmin_discussions@estia.media.uoa.gr
>> >> http://estia.media.uoa.gr/mailman/listinfo/yasmin_discussions
>> >>
>> >> Yasmin URL: http://www.media.uoa.gr/yasmin
>> >>
>> >> HOW TO SUBSCRIBE: click on the link to the list you wish to subscribe
>> to.
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>> >> your e-mail address in the last field. Enter password if asked. Click
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>> >> HOW TO ENABLE / DISABLE DIGEST MODE: in the options page, find the "Set
>> >> Digest Mode" option and set it to either on or off.
>> >>
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > Yasmin_discussions mailing list
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>
>
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Tuesday, December 4, 2012

[Yasmin_discussions] diverse faces that Cybernetics had in Latin America

Yamsiners

A reminder that our YASMIN DISCUSSION list is also available at

http://yasminlist.blogspot.com/

If you dont want to the email notifications

The current discussion is

diverse faces that Cybernetics had in Latin America

please join in !

roger malina



[Yasmin_discussions] Cibernética / Latin America
Dear Yasminers,

Ever since the presentation of the Latin American Forum in ISEA2010, the
Latin American Forum events became a treasured feature of the ISEA symposia.

The Latin American Forum III at ISEA2012 hosted 40 events that represented
well the diversity of the efforts to articulate art, science and technology
in Latin America. With the idea to explore the deep roots of the
interaction of these cultures we had the opportunity to propose a panel on
the "History of Cybernetics in Latin America".

For years I have been reading and collecting information about the diverse
faces that Cybernetics had in Latin America since the origin of the idea of
cybernetics to the present days. To explore such a complex set of
historical layers we had the pleasure to listen experts in four key moments
of such history.

The panelists were:
Susana Quintanilla (UNAM, Mexico) presenting her research about Arturo
Rosenblueth in Mexico in the 40's and 50's.
Pablo Colapino (University of California) presenting his research on the
art exhibition "Arte y Cibernética" in Argentina in the 60's.
Eden Medina (University of Indiana) presenting her research about the
cybernetic management project Cybersyn in Chile, in the 70's.
Eduardo Bayro (CINVESTAV, Mexico) contextualizing his own current work in
computational geometry and the history of Cybernetics in Mexico.

The guests of this discussion in Yasmin are some of the people who were
part of the audience: Esteban García (Purdue University), Alejandro Martin
(biblioteca virtual BLAA), Eugenio Tisselli (Planetary Collegium) and
Felipe Cesar Londoño (Universidad de Caldas) who was the sponsor of this
academic event.

We are going to have the privilege to have in the discussion Ranulph
Glanville who is a worldwide expert on Cybernetics.

Nina Czegledy and Roger Malia, who don't need presentation, kindly invited
us to follow and elaborate about the panel in Yasmin and they will be
participating too.

Saludos,

--
Andres Burbano
PhD Candidate Media Arts and Technology | University of California Santa
Barbara

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