Humans Will Always Be Better Than Machines: Participatory and Performance Art in the Age of Assistive Technology

Abstract

In Lauren McCarthy’s work Lauren, she installs customized software and hardware in a willing participant’s home. For 3 consecutive days, the artist performs as assistive technology in the same way someone would operate Alexa or Siri. Similar to voice activated technology, Lauren is able to provide, if not better, assistance to the participant. Through her observations, Lauren learns the nuances of her participant’s behavior and may preemptively execute an action. For instance, Lauren will turn down the lights down when she sees the participant preparing for bed. McCarthy’s work puts the onus on the participant to responsibly transmit commands to her in a way that may not occur with other assistive technology. In Lauren, McCarthy’s intentions and offerings are meant to exceed the overtly synthetic presence of Alexa or a Siri. Lauren doesn’t merely perform tasks, she is both benevolent and omnipresent. But do we want technology to be human-like? Is the purpose of artificial and assistive technology meant to ease the burden of daily life such as chores and creating shopping lists? Or, do we desire machines and devices as entities with the special skill to intuit our needs based on our actions and trebles to our voice?

Presenters

Dorothy R Santos

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

New Media, Technology and the Arts

KEYWORDS

"Arts and Technology", " Design Technology", " Video"

Digital Media

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