pulsepool

Museum of Science, Boston
April 23 - 29, 2007
9am - 5pm

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Place a finger to your neck or wrist.  Find your pulse.  How does it alter your awareness of your body?  Imagine if you could simultaneously see and
experience another person's pulse the way you feel your own. 

Pulse Pool is a collaborative multimedia installation created by the Symbiotic Computer Laboratory at the University of Oklahoma. The interconnected components of the Pulse Pool project explore how access to otherwise unavailable corporal information affects human interaction.

Wearable electronic units measure individuals’ heart rates and transmit this data
to other participants through physical stimulation created by small, vibrating
motors incorporated within the devices.  This allows participants to feel the
pulse of individuals who are in close proximity to them.  Additionally, a visual representation of this information is created by droplets of water falling and
making ripples in a pool.  These droplets are synchronized with live pulse and relative location data that is collected using wireless communication and RFID positioning technology.  An internet connection and custom software allows
real-time and archived transmissions of information about the localized Pulse
Pool
community to be shared with the global community on the World Wide
Web. This makes it possible to create interaction between Pulse Pool
communities in remote locations.

Pulse Pool is a 2006 commission of New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc. for its Turbulence website made possible with funding from mediaThe Foundation. Additional funding was provided by the University of Oklahoma College of Engineering, School of Computer Science, the Museum of Science, Boston, the National Endowment for the Arts, Rhizome.org, the University of Oklahoma Symbiotic Computer Laboratory, and the OU School of Art.

Created by:

Professor Adam Brown
Dr. Andrew Fagg

with:

Andy Archinal
Sam Bleckley
Casey Courtney

Patrick Cunningham
Joshua Gay
Brent Goddard

Jared Gomez
Tim Hunt
Justen Renyer
Matt Roman

With contributions from:
James Avery
Alan Hatcher
Quintin Hughes

Joshua Gay

Joshua Gay holds a B.A in Mathematics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and has spent several years as both a copy editor and professional software developer in New York and Boston.  Currently he is a first year graduate student in Computer Science at the University of Oklahoma and works as a research assistant in the
Symbiotic Computing Lab doing work in the area of computational neuroscience with the Brain Machine Interfaces group. His interests include artificial intelligence, epistemology, dance, dialectic, free software, and poetry.