DocumentCode
376218
Title
Design considerations for an oxygen flute
Author
Niemeyer, Greg
Author_Institution
Dept. of Art, California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
575
Lastpage
579
Abstract
The "greenhouse effect" polemic demonstrates how cultural dispositions can isolate perceptions from physical reality. The cost of this isolation is a suspension of the perception of cause and effect. Without cause and effect, we cannot reliably link our actions to their effects on our environment. I present design considerations for a project which displays the causal relation between humans and their environment. This project, called Oxygen Flute is a hybrid system, which combines a physical structure, dynamic virtual information technology and real time computer music to enhance the perception of the CO2 cycle and the causal relation between human respiration, air quality, and plant life. The system aims to present an immersive, transparent relation between users and their environment. This transparent relation is perhaps a way to overcome cultural dispositions, and to perceive that human life is by no means self-sustaining, but rather dependent on a dense net of supporting natural processes
Keywords
ecology; gas sensors; music; CO2 cycle; Greenhouse effect; Oxygen Flute project; air quality; causal relation; cause and effect; cultural dispositions; dynamic virtual information technology; human life; human respiration; hybrid system; immersive transparent relation; perceptions; physical structure; plant life; real time computer music; supporting natural processes; Art; Biological system modeling; Carbon dioxide; Computer displays; Costs; Cultural differences; Fossil fuels; Global communication; Humans; Oxygen;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Virtual Systems and Multimedia, 2001. Proceedings. Seventh International Conference on
Conference_Location
Berkeley, CA
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1402-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VSMM.2001.969715
Filename
969715
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