Rachel Sagner Buurma | How to Think Like a Humanist About Information [PUBLIC LECTURE]
University Center - UL105 63 5th Ave, New York, NY, United StatesFellowship Information Session
Wolff Conference Room - D1103 6 East 16th Street, New York, NY, United StatesThis information session introduces the Integrative PhD Fellowship Program to interested graduate students at the New School for Social Research, Parsons School of Design, and the School of Public Engagement. […]
Collaborative Seminar “Get-together”
University Center — U700 63 Fifth Ave., New York, NY, United StatesYou are cordially invited to an Integrative PhD Collaborative Seminar "Get-together" on February 22nd. The Mellon funded Integrative PhD Program supports cross-divisional graduate research seminars taught by pairs of faculty from […]
Kieran Healy Workshop
6 E 16th Street, D 1103 Kieran Healy informally examines how social science, and especially sociology, has been affected by the rise of social media. New social media platforms disintermediate communication, make people […]
Kieran Healy
Orientation Room - M 104 68 5th Ave, New York, NY, United StatesSocial Science in the Age of Social Media Kieran Healy informally examines how social science, and especially sociology, has been affected by the rise of social media. New social media platforms disintermediate communication, […]
Collaborative Research Seminars — Information Session #2
University Center — U700 63 Fifth Ave., New York, NY, United StatesYou are cordially invited to an Integrative PhD Collaborative Seminar information session on May 16th. The Mellon funded Integrative PhD Program supports cross-divisional graduate research seminars taught by pairs of faculty from NSSR, […]
Collaborative Research Seminar Proposals Due
More information at http://integrativephd.org/seminars
Johanna Drucker: Visualization and Knowledge: Modelling, Discovery, Display
University Center - UL105 63 5th Ave, New York, NY, United StatesThe relationship between knowledge and visual forms has changed as tools and platforms used for data display, discovery, and modeling have become ubiquitous. These practices raise basic questions about the […]
Katherine Hayles
University Center - UL105 63 5th Ave, New York, NY, United StatesKatherine Hayles : Public Lecture Thinking Design through Unthought: The Power of the Cognitive Nonconscious. Wed. Nov. 1, 2017, 6pm Where do good design ideas come from? Recent research in neuroscience […]
David Parisi
Dr. David Parisi’s research investigates the past, present, and future of touching with digital technologies. His new book Archaeologies of Touch: Interfacing with Haptics from Electricity to Computing (University of Minnesota Press, 2018) explores the technological transformations of touch necessary for the invention of touch-based computer interfaces. Opening with an examination of touch’s role in apprehending the mysteries of eighteenth century electrical machines, and closing with an analysis of new computing technologies that digitally synthesize haptic sensations, Archaeologies of Touch traces the iterative development of a technoscientific haptics across four centuries. Along the way, he shows how electric shock, experimental psychology, cybernetics, aesthetics, telemanipulation robotics, and virtual reality each participated in a reconceptualization of touch necessary for its integration into contemporary computing technologies. His research on tactility has been featured in forums such as The Wall Street Journal, Vice, Playboy Magazine, Computer Business Review, and Public Seminar.
As a leader in the emerging field of Haptic Media Studies, Dr. Parisi’s scholarship urges media scholars to reflect on touch’s importance to new and old media alike. Through his contributions to the fields of media archaeology, Video Game Studies, Sensory Studies, cybersex, and media history, Parisi has advanced a haptocentric account of media that brings increased attention to this long-neglected mode of experience. Bringing his previous research on haptics and together with his work on video game interfaces, Parisi’s next book will provide a history of the rumble feedback mechanism used to add touch sensations to video games.