“Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy

«Cogito in Space» is an interdisciplinary art project that sends «thoughts» to outer space. The project, led by artist Daniela de Paulis, involves neuroscientists, radio operators and radio astronomers. They use brain waves collected by the neuroscientists in an electroencephalogram (EEG) scan whil...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paola Castaño
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya 2020-09-01
Series:Artnodes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://raco.cat/index.php/Artnodes/article/view/373889
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spelling doaj-a7c5920da9ec4d1bbd2849f738fbd56f2021-06-11T11:35:31ZcatUniversitat Oberta de CatalunyaArtnodes1695-59512020-09-012510.7238/a.v0i25.3318“Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio AstronomyPaola Castaño0Cardiff University «Cogito in Space» is an interdisciplinary art project that sends «thoughts» to outer space. The project, led by artist Daniela de Paulis, involves neuroscientists, radio operators and radio astronomers. They use brain waves collected by the neuroscientists in an electroencephalogram (EEG) scan while the person being scanned watches images of the Universe and Earth from space with a virtual reality headset. This data is converted into a stream of sound, and then transmitted by the radio operators to non-targeted points in the sky using the Dwingeloo radio telescope in the Netherlands. This article examines the dialogue that Cogito crafted between art, radio astronomy and neuroscience. From a sociology of science perspective, I argue that this dialogue is a poetic reinterpretation of scientific instruments used by neuroscientists and radio astronomers. With poetic, I refer broadly to the process of creating a set of symbols that weave connections between social worlds. These symbols’ interpretations remain open-ended, and exist in the interstices between the empirical and the speculative. Thus, while becoming vehicles of artistic expression, scientific instruments are re-interrogated in a new framework of meaning. I characterise the central ideas of the project, its process of design and its performance based on interviews with the members of the collaboration; participant observation during an academic presentation and a performance at the Dwingeloo radio telescope in November, 2018; and documentary analysis of reports and publications from the project. https://raco.cat/index.php/Artnodes/article/view/373889art, Radio Astronomy, Neuroscience, Sociology of Science, instruments, experiment
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paola Castaño
spellingShingle Paola Castaño
“Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
Artnodes
art, Radio Astronomy, Neuroscience, Sociology of Science, instruments, experiment
author_facet Paola Castaño
author_sort Paola Castaño
title “Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
title_short “Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
title_full “Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
title_fullStr “Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
title_full_unstemmed “Somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” Art, Neuroscience, and Radio Astronomy
title_sort “somebody’s noises are another person’s signal:” art, neuroscience, and radio astronomy
publisher Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
series Artnodes
issn 1695-5951
publishDate 2020-09-01
description «Cogito in Space» is an interdisciplinary art project that sends «thoughts» to outer space. The project, led by artist Daniela de Paulis, involves neuroscientists, radio operators and radio astronomers. They use brain waves collected by the neuroscientists in an electroencephalogram (EEG) scan while the person being scanned watches images of the Universe and Earth from space with a virtual reality headset. This data is converted into a stream of sound, and then transmitted by the radio operators to non-targeted points in the sky using the Dwingeloo radio telescope in the Netherlands. This article examines the dialogue that Cogito crafted between art, radio astronomy and neuroscience. From a sociology of science perspective, I argue that this dialogue is a poetic reinterpretation of scientific instruments used by neuroscientists and radio astronomers. With poetic, I refer broadly to the process of creating a set of symbols that weave connections between social worlds. These symbols’ interpretations remain open-ended, and exist in the interstices between the empirical and the speculative. Thus, while becoming vehicles of artistic expression, scientific instruments are re-interrogated in a new framework of meaning. I characterise the central ideas of the project, its process of design and its performance based on interviews with the members of the collaboration; participant observation during an academic presentation and a performance at the Dwingeloo radio telescope in November, 2018; and documentary analysis of reports and publications from the project.
topic art, Radio Astronomy, Neuroscience, Sociology of Science, instruments, experiment
url https://raco.cat/index.php/Artnodes/article/view/373889
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