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NEXUS: A Tangible Multi-User Sensor-Based Telematic Novel Mixing-Interface for Multimedial Exploration

Published: 18 September 2024 Publication History

Abstract

This paper explores the realm of telematic performance practice, interconnecting geographically disparate locations and performers through telecommunication technologies. Specifically, we focus on networked multimedia mixing and advance the field within the framework of third-wave human-computer interaction, emphasizing embodied interaction. Along with a detailed introduction of our Novel Interface for Multimedial Exploration, the NEXUS, we provide insights into our first use-case scenario, employing the NEXUS-NIME within a telematic performance context. Adapting and expanding on existing examples of dimension spaces, we introduce a novel Dimension Space for Phenomenologically Situated Interaction, which accounts for situated embodiment. It is employed in a dimension space analysis comparing the NEXUS with historical interfaces for networked musical and multimedial expression that incorporate multimodal interactions through tangible user interfaces. In doing so we demonstrate the NEXUS’s role as a transformative multi-user tool and bundle of NIMEs, shifting sound engineering practices from one of transparency and social fidelity to one of hypermediacy, risk and respons-ability. Drawing on concepts from feminist new materialism and posthumanism, the NEXUS opens new avenues for rendering-capable, for exploring complex interdependencies between human and non-human actors becoming-with in telematic ecosystems.

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Published In

cover image ACM Other conferences
AM '24: Proceedings of the 19th International Audio Mostly Conference: Explorations in Sonic Cultures
September 2024
565 pages
ISBN:9798400709685
DOI:10.1145/3678299
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License.

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 18 September 2024

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Author Tags

  1. Human-Computer Interaction
  2. New Interfaces for Musical Expression
  3. Telematic performance
  4. digital augmentation
  5. digital musical instrument
  6. dimension space analysis
  7. embedded systems
  8. embodied interaction
  9. extended reality
  10. feminist new materialism.
  11. mixed reality
  12. networked multimedia mixing
  13. posthumanism
  14. responsive environments
  15. sonic interaction design
  16. tangible user interfaces

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  • Swiss National Science Foundation

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AM '24

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Overall Acceptance Rate 177 of 275 submissions, 64%

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