Category: Assemblage Brain

Reworking the Brain in Berlin

 

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Panel
Fri, 01.02.2019
15:30 to 17:00
Auditorium

What happens when the neurosciences shape culture and promise to assist in overcoming traumas and conflicts? Can technologies like VR foster new ways of understanding? Is it possible to expand the plasticity of the brain? In this panel, Hyphen-Labs present excerpts from their work NeuroSpeculative AfroFeminism. They underline the importance of understanding how synaptic lineages are made, harvested, and experienced and discuss how speculative practices can assist in collectively materializing and (re)imagining memories, experiences, and future scenarios. Tony D Sampson introduces his thesis on neuroculture, which argues that capitalism is increasingly colonizing of our brains. However, the coincidence of capitalism and the neurosciences (neurocapitalism) points as much to what the brain can do, as it reveals what can happen to the brain.

The panel is organized in collaboration with Winchester School of Art.

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Full programme for Beijing conference on Media Philosophy and Cognitive Science announced…

Flying on Thurs to China for the first time. This looks like a really interesting programme.

Media Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and the Future of the Humanities

International Summit Conference: Media Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and the Future of the Humanities

Place: Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China

Time: Oct. 27 to 28, 2018

Since 2013, Beijing Normal University hosts an international conference addressing a theme central to humanistic inquiry.  Interdisciplinary in scope, method, and perspective, the conference seeks to provide a forum for exchanging ideas in the Humanities that will be of significance and interest to academic communities in both China and beyond.  Toward that end in keeping with its established practice, this year’s conference brings together sixteen scholars whose work, ranging from media studies, philosophy, cognitive science, and literary and critical theories, promises to help expand the tradition this conference has established.  The possible topics to be explored include: media, technologies and epistemics, media and philosophers, neuroscience, humanism, non-humanism, and anti-humanism, elements and environment, politics of remediation, and others.

Agenda

会议流程

Round Table Discussion

学术论坛(圆桌讨论)

Time:

October 27, 2018, Saturday: 8:30-17:30  2018年10月27日(周六)8:30-17:30

October 28, 2018, Sunday: 8:30-11:30   2018年10月28日(周日)8:30-11:30

Venue:

Conference Hall No.6, Jingshi Hotel, BNU

北京师范大学京师大厦第六会议厅

Opening Ceremony

开幕典礼

Opening Address

第五届“思想与方法”高端学术论坛开幕致辞

Session I 第一场

October 27, 8:30-11:30 am      10月27日(周六)上午8:30-11:30

Chair: Briankle G. Chang; Discussant: Mary Ann Doane, Shunya Yoshimi

(主持人:张正平;评点人:多恩,吉见俊哉)

Siegfried Zielinski: Generators of Surprise: Diverse Media Thinking

(齐林斯基:惊奇制造者——多样的媒介思想)

Mark Hansen: How Can the Mind Participate in (Artificial) Communication?: An Alternate Path Toward Thinking (with) Machines

(汉森:心灵怎样参与(人工)交流?——(和)机器思考的替代路径)

David Gunkel: Other Things: AI, Robots and Society

(冈克尔:其他的物——人工智能、机器人和社会)

Luo Yuejia: Neural Mechanism for Emotion and Cognitive Function

(罗跃嘉:情绪与认知功能的认知与阿神经基础)

Session II 第二场

October 27: 2:00 – 5:30 pm     10月27日(周六)下午2:00-5:30

Chair: Siegfried Zielinski; Discussant: Sybille Krämer, Tony Sampson

(主持人:齐林斯基;评点人:克莱默,桑普森)

Mary Ann Doane: The Concept of Immersion: Mediated Space and the Location of the Subject

(多恩:沉浸的概念——中介空间和主体位置)

Myung-koo Kang: How a Gaze Can Become Violence: Representations of the North Korean Sports Team to Pyeongchang Olympic

(姜明求:凝视何以成为暴力——平昌冬奥会上朝鲜运动队的再现)

Christina Vagt: Outsourcing the Intellect

(瓦格特:智力外包)

Xu Yingjin: Why Does General Artificial Intelligence Need the Husserlian Notion of “Intentionality”?

(徐英瑾:通用人工智能为何需要胡塞尔的“意向性”理论?)

Jiang Yi: The Fuzzy Boundary of Cognitive Science and Humanities

(江仪:认知科学与人文科学的模糊边界)

Session III 第三场

October 28: 8:30-11:30 am 10月28日上午(周日)8:30-11:30

Chair: Myung-koo Kang; Discussant: Mark Hansen, David J. Gunkel

(主持人:姜明求;评点人:汉森,冈克尔)

Sybille Krämer: Media as Cultural Techniques: From Inscribed Surfaces to Digital Interfaces

(克莱默:作为文化技术的媒介——从书写平面到数字界面)

Shunya Yoshimi: Cultural Sustainability and the Redefinition of Humanities: The Role of University in the 21st century Globalized Society

(吉见俊哉:文化延续与人文科学再定义——21世纪全球化社会中大学的作用)

Liu Chao: Effect of Mortality Salience on Guilt and Shame and Its Neurocognitive Mechanism

(刘超:死亡凸显对内疚和羞耻的影响及其神经机制)

Tony Sampson: Transitions in Human–Computer Interaction: From Data Embodiment to Experience Capitalism

(桑普森:人机交互领域的转变——从数据具身化到经验资本主义)

Briankle G. Chang: Spectral Media

(张正平:幽灵般的媒体)

Workshop Sessions

(工作坊)

Workshop 1.  Stars and Clouds: Literature, Science, and the Media Philosophy of Michel Serres

(第一场:星与云:米歇尔·塞尔的文学、科学和媒介哲学)

Time: October 28, 2018, Sunday: 14:30-17:00

Venue: Conference Hall No.6, Jingshi Hotel, BNU

时间:2018年10月28日(周日)14:30-17:00

地点:北京师范大学京师大厦第六会议厅

Chair: Christina Vagt, Free Talk,

主持:瓦格特,自由讨论

Workshop 2.  Affect and Social Media

(第二场:情动与社会媒介)

Time: October 29, 2018, Monday: 9:00-11:30

Venue: Conference Room 5058, Area C, Main Building, School of Chinese Language

and Literature, BNU

时间:2018年10月29日(周一)9:00-11:30

地点:北京师范大学文学院,主楼C区5058会议室

Chair: Tony D. Sampson, Free Talk

桑普森主持,自由讨论

Media Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and the Future of the Humanities

Taking The Assemblage Brain to China!
International Summit Conference: Media Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and the Future of the Humanities
Place: Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China
Time: Oct. 27 to 28, 2018
Since 2013, Beijing Normal University hosts an international conference addressing a theme central to humanistic inquiry.  Interdisciplinary in scope, method, and perspective, the conference seeks to provide a forum for exchanging ideas in the Humanities that will be of significance and interest to academic communities in both China and beyond.  Toward that end in keeping with its established practice, this year’s conference brings together sixteen scholars whose work, ranging from media studies, philosophy, cognitive science, and literary and critical theories, promises to help expand the tradition this conference has established.  The possible topics to be explored include: media, technologies and epistemics, media and philosophers, neuroscience, humanism, non-humanism, and anti-humanism, elements and environment, politics of remediation, and others.
Participants: 
Briankle G. Chang, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Mary Ann Doane, University of California, Berkeley
Weigui Fang, Beijing Normal University
David Gunkel, Northern Illinois University
Orit Halpern, Concordia University
Yi Jiang, Beijing Normal University
Myungkoo Kang, Seoul National University
Sybille Krämer, Free University of Berlin
Chao Liu, Beijing Normal University
Yuejia Luo, Shenzhen University
Tony D Sampson, University of East London
Peter Szendy, Brown University
Christian Vagt, University of California, Santa Barbara
Joseph Vogl, Humboldt University of Berlin
Yingjin Xu, Fudan University
Shunya Yoshimi, University of Tokyo
Siegfried Zielinski, Berlin University of the Arts

 

Venue for A&SM#4

So this is part of the venue for A&SM#4 – the main lecture theatre in the USS building in Stratford, east London.

I was there last week doing this related talk on the A&SM project, conferences and book in the context of criticality and interdisciplinary research.

Thanks to Andrew Branch for grabbing this image.

Tony D Sampson

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Schedule for Neuroaffect streams at the Capacious conference in August

Here’s the schedule and line up for the two Neuroaffect streams at the Capacious conference in Lancaster, PA in August, and below there’s a link to the entire programme, which looks wonderful.

Thursday, August 9

(01:10 PM — 02:50 PM)

S15(02) Neuroaffect (Neuroaffect 2)

Tony D Sampson (chair)

Darren Kelsey: Neuropolitics, affective mythology and murmurations: a critical approach to culture, ideology and consciousness

Ali Lara: The Affective Subject. Ontological considerations from Neurosciences to Psychology

Holly Avella: Neuroplasticity’s Affective Conduits

Brett Ingram: Political Junkies: Affective Politics and Addictive Rhetoric

 

Saturday, August 11

01:10 PM — 02:50 PM

S15(01) Neuroaffect (Neuroaffect 1)

Mona Mannevuo: Nudging the Unconscious: uses of neuroeconomics in the universal basic income experiment

James Ash: Neuroaffective Design and Fintech: nonintentional experience in high cost short term credit

Tero Karppi: Facebook’s Laboratory of Emotion

Tony D Sampson (chair): The Collective Effect: The politics of [shared user] experience

 

Full Programme: http://capaciousjournal.com/cms/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/capacious_AIMS_schedule.pdf

Neuroaffect Stream: Capacious: Affect Inquiry/Making Space

If the proposed panels come together at the Capacious Conference as well as they have just done on paper it’ll be a great summer…

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Here’s a taster

Nudging the unconscious: uses of neuroeconomics in the universal basic income experiment; Neuroaffective Design and Fintech: nonintentional experience in high cost short term credit; Facebook’s Laboratory of Emotion; The Collective Effect: The politics of [shared user] experience; Neuropolitics, affective mythology and murmurations: a critical approach to culture, ideology and consciousness; The Affective Subject. Ontological considerations from neurosciences to psychology; Neuroplasticity’s Affective Conduits; Political Junkies: Affective politics and addictive rhetoric

Bookmark now and register when open

Capacious: Affect Inquiry/Making Space August 8 to 11, 2018, Millerville University, Lancaster PA, USA.

http://capaciousjournal.com/conference/

 

 

Rizosfera :: Neuro-paesaggi digitali. Intervista a Tony D Sampson (Rizonomia, RZN002)

A Big Thank You to Rizosfera…
Italian cover
11
Introduzione
di Rizosfera
Tony D. Sampson è un docente della University of East Lon-don che si occupa di new media, filosofia e cultura digitale. Lavora da sempre su un impervio crocevia non convenzionale dove l’analisi politica non si discosta mai dall’analisi teorica del mondo digitale, dai comportamenti sociali e dalla critica degli eventi che in questi anni hanno sistematicamente connotato la nostra società. Scrivendo su argomenti quali virus e la viralità della comunicazione, il contagio e l’imitazione comportamen-tale, il cervello e la neurocultura, cioè su quei segmenti alta-mente sensibili della nostra società nata dal connubio accelera-to tra tecnologia e ideologia dei mercati manipolati dal valore e dal profitto, Tony D. Sampson riesce a cogliere con largo an-ticipo e con estrema lungimiranza alcuni dei temi dello scontro in atto tra controllo, tecnologia, società, e libertà individuali e di gruppo. Questo fa di lui, oltre che un brillante teorico dei nuovi media e della cultura digitale, un grande pensatore poli-tico. Per questo motivo, l’esigenza di scandagliare con lui il suo ultimo libro ‘The Assemblage Brain’ (Minnesota Press, 2017) è urgente per capire quali sfide si aprono dinnanzi a noi nel prossimo futuro.

 

Review of the Assemblage Brain

Tero Karppi has written a nice review of The Assemblage Brain for AI & Society Journal. It’s actually more than a mere “review” of this book since it also makes a number of knowing references to developments (and improvements) made between Virality and The Assemblage Brain.

Here’s Tero’s concluding remarks…

“Sampson’s vision of media culture is dark, original and innovative. In a Tardean manner, Sampson develops his own voice through the ability to adapt texts and ideas that have not been brought together and produce something original.
Sampson’s book is an assemblage, which expands the way brain can be thought and gives the name of “neuroculture” to our everyday dystopia, which is not the future, but has already occupied “all corners of cultural, social, political and economic life” (ix).” Karppi, T. AI & Soc (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00146-018-0826-8

Looking forward to Tero’s Disconnect book! Due in spring this year (2018).

Just to note that the full review is here and if you do not have institutional access it costs money.

Message me @TonyDSpamson

 

Final Call for Abstracts: “Neuroaffect” at Capacious

Final Call for Abstracts: “Neuroaffect” at Capacious: Affect Inquiry/Making Space Conference: August 8 to 11, 2018
Final reminder – The final deadline for submissions is Thursday, March 15, 2018.
Call for 250-word paper abstracts for Stream 15: Neuroaffect
For Capacious: Affect Inquiry/Making Space Conference: August 8 to 11, 2018 at Millersville University’s Ware Center, Lancaster, Pennsylvania: http://capaciousjournal.com/conference/

S15: “Neuroaffect”
cropped-phrenology

Call for 250-word paper abstracts can now be submitted to
The final deadline for submissions is Thursday, March 15, 2018.
STREAM ORGANIZER
Tony D. Sampson
For the most part affect theory has enthusiastically welcomed the neurosciences into its fold. Through the work of Libet (1985), Damasio (1995), and LeDoux (2003), for example, affect theorists have challenged mainstream anthropocentricism in the humanities, upsetting the stability of a model of human cognition previously assumed to hold sway over the perceptible world. As follows, the brain sciences have helped to support an alternative perspective in which humans arrive late to consciousness since their brains take time to build a cognitive reaction. Immediate experience of consciousness is, as such, a backdated illusion and just one of many responses to the dynamics of the exteriority of experience. As Gibbs (2010) argues, there can be no “pure cognition… uncontaminated by the richness of sensate experience, including affective experience” (p. 200). Indeed, according to affect theory, thinking is not at all limited to the thought inside the brain. On one hand, somatic markers act as a kind of corporeal thinking in which emotion becomes a capture of affect in consciousness. On the other, a new materialist affect theory extends the image of thought to a wider remit of incorporeal sense making including nonhumans, self-organizing matter, assemblages and events. The analytical focus has thus shifted away from conventional cognitive processes (perception, memory, representation) to the significance of such things as imperceptibility (Grosz, 2003), precognition and nonrepresentation (Thrift, 2007), premediation (Grusin, 2010), processual incorporeality (Gregg and Seigworth, 2010) and discognition (Shaviro, 2015).
There has, nevertheless, been an inevitable backlash against affect theory’s cosying up to the brain sciences. Wetherall (2012), for example, argues that Thrift and Massumi take the wrong message from neuroscience (p. 61). Her work does not simply reject neuroscience, but instead uses it to (re)personalize affect and renegotiate it alongside discourse, representation and meaning. Similarly, Hayles (2017) has recently drawn on the same neuroscientific resources as affect theory (e.g. Damasio, Libet), but argues against the Spinoza-Deleuzian overtures of new materialism and returns the brain (and its fellow cognizers) to the cognitive theoretical frame.
The neuroaffect stream welcomes provocative, inventive and speculative interventions that engage with the wide-ranging influence of the neurosciences on affect theory and related areas. It asks for submissions that engage with neuro-concepts of affect, such as the nonconscious, somatic markers, lags, mirror neurons, neuro-typicality, assemblage brains, technological nonconscious and discognition, while also addressing the numerous challenges and reinventions of affect stemming from various interventions in the humanities and social sciences.
Possible topics for the stream are not limited to the following neuros:
Neuroaffect, somatic markers, lags, mirror neurons, neuro-typicality, cognition, noncognition, discognition, consciousness, nonconsciousness, technological nonconscious, brains, microbrains, assemblage brains, temporality and space, locationism, neuroevents, neuropolitics, neuropopulism, neuro-dystopia/utopia, neurocapitalism, neuromedia, ontology, nonhumans, Anthropocene, contagion, organic and inorganic matter, assemblages, antilocationism, neurophilosophy, neurophenomenology, neuroprocess philosophy, neurocomputing, neural nets, brain-computer interfaces, neurofiction, brain-art, neuroaesthetics, neurobleedin’ everything…
REFERENCES

Damasio, A. (1995). Descartes’ error: emotion, reason, and the human brain. New York: Penguin.

Damasio, A. (2000). The feeling of what happens: body, emotion, and the making of consciousness. London: Vintage.

Gibbs, A. (2010). After affect sympathy, Synchrony, and mimetic communication. In Gregg, M. & Seigworth, G. J. (Eds.), The affective theory reader (pp. 186-205). Durham & London: Duke University Press.

Gregg, M. & Seigworth, G. J. (2010). The affective theory reader. Durham & London: Duke University Press.

Grosz, E. (2002). A politics of imperceptibility: A response to ‘anti-racism, multiculturalism and the ethics of identification’ Philosophy and Social Criticism. 28 (4) pp. 463-472.

Grusin, R. (2010). Premediation: affect and mediality after 9/11. New York, London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Hayles, K. N. (2006). Traumas in code. Critical Inquiry 33(1), 136-157.

Hayles, K. N. (2017). Unthought: the power of the cognitive nonconscious. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.

Karppi, T. Kahkonen, L. & Mannevuo, M. (Eds.) (2016). Affective capitalism. Ephemera (16)4 Ephemera.

LeDoux, J. (2003). The synaptic self: how our brains become who we are. New York: Penguin Books.

Libet, B. (1985). Unconscious cerebral initiative and the role of conscious will in voluntary action. Behavioral Brain Sciences. (8)5, 29–566.

Rolls, E. T. (2012). Neuroculture: on the implications of brain science. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Shaviro, S. (2015). Discognition. New York: Repeater Books.

Sampson, T. D. (2016). The Assemblage brain: sense making in neuroculture. Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.

Thrift, N. (2004). Remembering the technological unconscious by foregrounding knowledges of position. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 22(1), 175-190.

Thrift, N. (2007). Non-Representational theory: space, politics, affect. New York, London: Routledge.

Dr Tony D Sampson PhD, MA, BSc, FHEA
Reader in Digital Media Cultures and Communications
College of Arts, Technology and Innovation
UEL