Ghetto Blasts: Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Standard

Ghetto Blasts : Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness. / Vehlken, Sebastian.

Neighborhood Technologies : Media and Mathematics of Dynamic Networks. ed. / Tobias Harks; Sebastian Vehlken. Zürich : Diaphanes Verlag, 2015. p. 37-66.

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Harvard

Vehlken, S 2015, Ghetto Blasts: Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness. in T Harks & S Vehlken (eds), Neighborhood Technologies : Media and Mathematics of Dynamic Networks. Diaphanes Verlag, Zürich, pp. 37-66. <https://www.diaphanes.net/buch/artikel/3090>

APA

Vehlken, S. (2015). Ghetto Blasts: Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness. In T. Harks, & S. Vehlken (Eds.), Neighborhood Technologies : Media and Mathematics of Dynamic Networks (pp. 37-66). Diaphanes Verlag. https://www.diaphanes.net/buch/artikel/3090

Vancouver

Vehlken S. Ghetto Blasts: Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness. In Harks T, Vehlken S, editors, Neighborhood Technologies : Media and Mathematics of Dynamic Networks. Zürich: Diaphanes Verlag. 2015. p. 37-66

Bibtex

@inbook{08953718f542493ebf9d6639c912139a,
title = "Ghetto Blasts: Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness",
abstract = "Media and Mathematics of Dynamic NetworksThis article gives a media-historical overview of several seminal applications of Neighborhood Technologies, (1) in Cellular Automata (CA), (2) in Swarm Intelligence (SI), and (3) in Agent-based Modeling (ABM). It does by no way attempt to be exhaustive, but rather highlights some initial and seminal media-technological contributions towards a mindset which bears neighborhood principles in its core. The text thus centers around media technologies which are based upon the phenomenon that the specific topological settings in local neighborhoods give rise to interesting emergent global patterns which develop dynamically over time and which yield novel ways of generating problem solutions: Autonomy, emergence, and distributed functioning replace preprogramming, control, and centralization. Neighborhood Technologies thus can be understood on two levels: First, as specific spatial structures which initiate non-linear processes over time and whose results often cannot be determined in advance. As an effect, they provide media interfaces which visualize the interplay between local neighborhood interactions and global effects, e.g. in Cellular Automata (CA) where the spatial layout of the media technology enables dynamic processes and at the same time visualizes them as computer graphics. And secondly, they can be perceived as engines of transdisciplinary thinking, bridging fields like mathematical modeling, computer simulation and engineering. Neighborhood Technologies moderate between disciplines e.g. by implementing findings from biology in swarm-intelligent robot collectives whose behavior then is re-applied as an experimental setting for (con-)testing supposed biological factors of collective motion in animal swarms. The central thesis of this article is that Neighborhood Technologies by way of their foundation in neighborhood interaction make the notion of space utterly dynamic and transformable, and always intriguingly connected to functions of time. By their dynamical collective formation, Neighborhood Technologies provide decisive information about complex real-world phenomena.",
keywords = "Digital media, Media and communication studies",
author = "Sebastian Vehlken",
year = "2015",
month = apr,
day = "15",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-03734-523-8",
pages = "37--66",
editor = "Tobias Harks and Sebastian Vehlken",
booktitle = "Neighborhood Technologies",
publisher = "Diaphanes Verlag",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Ghetto Blasts

T2 - Media Histories of Neighborhood Technologies between Segregation, Cooperation, and Craziness

AU - Vehlken, Sebastian

PY - 2015/4/15

Y1 - 2015/4/15

N2 - Media and Mathematics of Dynamic NetworksThis article gives a media-historical overview of several seminal applications of Neighborhood Technologies, (1) in Cellular Automata (CA), (2) in Swarm Intelligence (SI), and (3) in Agent-based Modeling (ABM). It does by no way attempt to be exhaustive, but rather highlights some initial and seminal media-technological contributions towards a mindset which bears neighborhood principles in its core. The text thus centers around media technologies which are based upon the phenomenon that the specific topological settings in local neighborhoods give rise to interesting emergent global patterns which develop dynamically over time and which yield novel ways of generating problem solutions: Autonomy, emergence, and distributed functioning replace preprogramming, control, and centralization. Neighborhood Technologies thus can be understood on two levels: First, as specific spatial structures which initiate non-linear processes over time and whose results often cannot be determined in advance. As an effect, they provide media interfaces which visualize the interplay between local neighborhood interactions and global effects, e.g. in Cellular Automata (CA) where the spatial layout of the media technology enables dynamic processes and at the same time visualizes them as computer graphics. And secondly, they can be perceived as engines of transdisciplinary thinking, bridging fields like mathematical modeling, computer simulation and engineering. Neighborhood Technologies moderate between disciplines e.g. by implementing findings from biology in swarm-intelligent robot collectives whose behavior then is re-applied as an experimental setting for (con-)testing supposed biological factors of collective motion in animal swarms. The central thesis of this article is that Neighborhood Technologies by way of their foundation in neighborhood interaction make the notion of space utterly dynamic and transformable, and always intriguingly connected to functions of time. By their dynamical collective formation, Neighborhood Technologies provide decisive information about complex real-world phenomena.

AB - Media and Mathematics of Dynamic NetworksThis article gives a media-historical overview of several seminal applications of Neighborhood Technologies, (1) in Cellular Automata (CA), (2) in Swarm Intelligence (SI), and (3) in Agent-based Modeling (ABM). It does by no way attempt to be exhaustive, but rather highlights some initial and seminal media-technological contributions towards a mindset which bears neighborhood principles in its core. The text thus centers around media technologies which are based upon the phenomenon that the specific topological settings in local neighborhoods give rise to interesting emergent global patterns which develop dynamically over time and which yield novel ways of generating problem solutions: Autonomy, emergence, and distributed functioning replace preprogramming, control, and centralization. Neighborhood Technologies thus can be understood on two levels: First, as specific spatial structures which initiate non-linear processes over time and whose results often cannot be determined in advance. As an effect, they provide media interfaces which visualize the interplay between local neighborhood interactions and global effects, e.g. in Cellular Automata (CA) where the spatial layout of the media technology enables dynamic processes and at the same time visualizes them as computer graphics. And secondly, they can be perceived as engines of transdisciplinary thinking, bridging fields like mathematical modeling, computer simulation and engineering. Neighborhood Technologies moderate between disciplines e.g. by implementing findings from biology in swarm-intelligent robot collectives whose behavior then is re-applied as an experimental setting for (con-)testing supposed biological factors of collective motion in animal swarms. The central thesis of this article is that Neighborhood Technologies by way of their foundation in neighborhood interaction make the notion of space utterly dynamic and transformable, and always intriguingly connected to functions of time. By their dynamical collective formation, Neighborhood Technologies provide decisive information about complex real-world phenomena.

KW - Digital media

KW - Media and communication studies

UR - https://www.diaphanes.net/titel/neighborhood-technologies-2515

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-3-03734-523-8

SP - 37

EP - 66

BT - Neighborhood Technologies

A2 - Harks, Tobias

A2 - Vehlken, Sebastian

PB - Diaphanes Verlag

CY - Zürich

ER -

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