Local Performance Networks: musical interdependency through gestures and controllers

2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 255-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
GIL WEINBERG

Informed by a proposed theoretical framework for the field of interconnected musical networks (Weinberg 2005), I describe a set of local musical networks that utilise novel gestural controllers for interdependent collaborative performance. The paper begins by contextualising developments in the field of musical networks in correlation with development of technological innovations, leading to the utilisations of gestural controllers in local musical networks. This introduction leads to the definition and categorisation of theoretical and practical approaches for the design of local gestural networks, addressing motivations, social strategies, network architectures, musical content, and control software and hardware. Based on this theoretical framework I describe the evolution of four local musical networks that utilise newly developed gestural controllers, titled ‘Squeezables’, ‘Musical Fireflies’, ‘Beatbugs’ and ‘Voice Patterns’. The paper discusses the design and development process of these projects and ends with a comparative analysis of the networks and controllers based on conceptual and practical criteria.

2012 ◽  
Vol 463-464 ◽  
pp. 1268-1271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cosmin Berceanu ◽  
Daniela Tarniţă

The design and control problems involved in the development process of robotic grippers have been active research topics in the last three decades. In this paper it is presented a new developed dexterous robotic hand whose mechanical structure is based on a biomechatronic approach. The control system for this artificial hand relies on modern software and hardware components which allow precise positioning of the fingers.


Author(s):  
Arnau Prat ◽  
Jan Sommer ◽  
Ayush Mani Nepal ◽  
Tobias Franz ◽  
Hauke Muntinga ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 681-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa Guzman

Drawing from ethnographic data and interviews collected in a Latina/o Pentecostal organization based in Northern California’s Bay Area, this paper analyzes how a religious street ministry that offers rehabilitation services and spiritual aid to criminalized individuals enacts spiritual supervision. Spiritual supervision refers to the process by which religious organizations incentivize middle-class individuals to participate in the construction of a criminalized class of individuals, as part of how they practice their Christian identities. This article analyzes how middle-class congregants supervise the actions and behaviors of criminalized individuals who perform gendered physical labor and participate in public dramatizations of their criminal stigma in exchange for housing, food, and religious participation. Spiritual supervision provides a novel theoretical framework for analyzing how carceral state power spreads through the institutional missions and practices of institutions that aim to rehabilitate but also reinforce racialized, gendered, and classed hierarchies that further stigmatize and control criminalized people. As a less visible form of punishment imposed outside formal criminal justice institutions, spiritual supervision illuminates how carceral control operates and affects spiritual and religious landscapes.


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