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Julia Buntaine, 2006, School Of Cognitive Science, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA, sculpture

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

 

Learn more at arts.mit.edu

 

All photos ©Karim Ben Khelifa

Please ask before use

Landscape picture of the Great Wall of China

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Bertrand Russell. Press conference New York, 1950. By Keystone Press Agency. photographic support, gelatin silver print.

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

It [organizes] the objects then it [disappear]s.

It [tags] the objects then it [dance]s

It [links] the objects then it [open]s to the semantic_North and the semantic_South.

 

The essence of the activity is that we are atomizing thought_objects to access the realm of quantum semantics.

One of the two beautiful blue lakes that surrounds the small town of Interlaken.

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

 

Learn more at arts.mit.edu

 

Photos ©Heidi Erickson

Please ask before use

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken during a trip to Athens and Kalymnos on the occasion of the Annual Summer Interdisciplinary Conference (ASIC) organized by Rich Shiffrin.

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

A sketch of a performance system in which two parties on opposite sides of a window (with no communication with each other) diagram on the window. The diagrams and sketches are visible to each party, but the discussion (e.g. context) is not.

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

 

Learn more at arts.mit.edu

 

Photos ©Heidi Erickson

Please ask before use

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Award-winning photojournalist, Karim Ben Khelifa, is widely known for his coverage of the Middle East conflicts, especially the Iraq and Afghan wars, where he covered the insurgent sides. While a Fellow at the Open Documentary Lab at MIT, Ben Khelifa designed and prototyped his latest project The Enemy. This immersive installation uses VR to bring the audience into conversations between enemies within longstanding global conflicts. During his residency, he collaborated with Fox Harrell of the Imagination, Computation and Expression (ICE) Laboratory, to integrate concepts from cognitive science and Artificial Intelligence-based interaction models into the project to engender empathy.

 

Learn more at arts.mit.edu

 

All photos ©Karim Ben Khelifa

Please ask before use

An element in play during the lecture.

"Who do you blame when things go wrong? - a human-systems perspective" - with Jamal Kinsella at the Rifle Club, Goldsmith Avenue, Portsmouth

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

Pictures taken on the occasion of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, organized this year (2006) in Vancouver, B.C., Canada at the end of July

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