The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control

The biological turn in computing has influenced the development of algorithmic control and what I call the vital network: a dynamic, relational, and generative assemblage that is self-organizing in response to the heterogeneity of contemporary network processes, connections, and communication. I dis...

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Main Author: Sandra Robinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ScholarWorks @ UMass Amherst 2016-09-01
Series:communication +1
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/vol5/iss1/5
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spelling doaj-8602b949d4cb4afc8c3c7158670425e82020-11-25T00:27:16ZengScholarWorks @ UMass Amherstcommunication +12380-61092016-09-01512210.7275/R5416V0RThe Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and ControlSandra RobinsonThe biological turn in computing has influenced the development of algorithmic control and what I call the vital network: a dynamic, relational, and generative assemblage that is self-organizing in response to the heterogeneity of contemporary network processes, connections, and communication. I discuss this biological turn in computation and control for communication alongside historically significant developments in cybernetics that set out the foundation for the development of self-regulating computer systems. Control is shifting away from models that historically relied on the human-animal model of cognition to govern communication and control, as in early cybernetics and computer science, to a decentred, nonhuman model of control by algorithm for communication and networks. To illustrate the rise of contemporary algorithmic control, I outline a particular example, that of the biologically-inspired routing algorithm known as a ‘quorum sensing’ algorithm. The increasing expansion of algorithms as a sense-making apparatus is important in the context of social media, but also in the subsystems that coordinate networked flows of information. In that domain, algorithms are not inferring categories of identity, sociality, and practice associated with Internet consumers, rather, these algorithms are designed to act on information flows as they are transmitted along the network. The development of autonomous control realized through the power of the algorithm to monitor, sort, organize, determine, and transmit communication is the form of control emerging as a postscript to Gilles Deleuze’s ‘postscript on societies of control.’http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/vol5/iss1/5vital networkcommunicationalgorithmcontrolDeleuzeCommunication Technology and New MediaOther PhilosophyScience and Technology Studies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra Robinson
spellingShingle Sandra Robinson
The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
communication +1
vital network
communication
algorithm
control
Deleuze
Communication Technology and New Media
Other Philosophy
Science and Technology Studies
author_facet Sandra Robinson
author_sort Sandra Robinson
title The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
title_short The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
title_full The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
title_fullStr The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
title_full_unstemmed The Vital Network: An Algorithmic Milieu of Communication and Control
title_sort vital network: an algorithmic milieu of communication and control
publisher ScholarWorks @ UMass Amherst
series communication +1
issn 2380-6109
publishDate 2016-09-01
description The biological turn in computing has influenced the development of algorithmic control and what I call the vital network: a dynamic, relational, and generative assemblage that is self-organizing in response to the heterogeneity of contemporary network processes, connections, and communication. I discuss this biological turn in computation and control for communication alongside historically significant developments in cybernetics that set out the foundation for the development of self-regulating computer systems. Control is shifting away from models that historically relied on the human-animal model of cognition to govern communication and control, as in early cybernetics and computer science, to a decentred, nonhuman model of control by algorithm for communication and networks. To illustrate the rise of contemporary algorithmic control, I outline a particular example, that of the biologically-inspired routing algorithm known as a ‘quorum sensing’ algorithm. The increasing expansion of algorithms as a sense-making apparatus is important in the context of social media, but also in the subsystems that coordinate networked flows of information. In that domain, algorithms are not inferring categories of identity, sociality, and practice associated with Internet consumers, rather, these algorithms are designed to act on information flows as they are transmitted along the network. The development of autonomous control realized through the power of the algorithm to monitor, sort, organize, determine, and transmit communication is the form of control emerging as a postscript to Gilles Deleuze’s ‘postscript on societies of control.’
topic vital network
communication
algorithm
control
Deleuze
Communication Technology and New Media
Other Philosophy
Science and Technology Studies
url http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/vol5/iss1/5
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