Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Brainstorm Enters the 21st Century
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To Be Another
I was hopping around the Internet, when a certain headline
jumped out at me: “What’s it like to see through the eyes of Another?” This was
either going to be about some bizarre alien conspiracy or some very enticing
science experiment. What I found was a project called “The Machine to be Another”,
which was conducted by a Barcelona design collective. A team of artists,
programmers, and engineers sought to experiment with empathy, perspective, and
reality.
Typically in labs that explore empathy, subjects use
computer avatars and answer questions while sitting in front of a screen. Video
games are a common tool of simulation to study racial or gender bias. In the Be
Another lab, however, there is a new method to create integrative approaches to
expand our concept of reality.
Using two large goggle and earpieces mounted on the two
subjects’ heads, the user’s brain is essentially tricked into seeing a 3-D,
lifelike video of the other person’s perspective. The goggles record the view
from one user and then feed those images and sounds to the headset of the
partner. When the two subject sync their movements—by touching objects, looking
around the room, and feeling their respective bodes—the subject gets the
complete sensation of being in the other’s body.
The goggles were designed based off of the Oculus VR, which
is a virtual reality headset originally designed for immersive video gaming. The
headset uses tracking technology that allows for 360 degree viewing. Every
movement that the goggles pick up gets tracked in real time, which allows for
optimal viewing. The Oculus rift captures unique and parallel images for both
eyes, which is similar to the way our eyes view the world. The headset mimics
reality as closely as possible.
Here’s the scene: a man and woman stand opposite each other.
They are both naked save for a headset that is connected to a monitor for
third-party viewing. The woman will look at her hands and see hairy knuckles
and a bulge in her pants. The man is quick to explore his newfound breasts. As
long as the pair stays roughly in sync, the Machine To Be Another can cheat the
brain and convince people that they have switched bodies.
This sounds like some sort of sci-fi version of 13 going on
30, but the Be Another Lab is focused on studying issue of race, gender, and
physical disability. The most startling aspect of the experiment of the lab is
how quickly the brain changes its understanding of reality. After years and
years of living in the same body, in fewer than ten seconds your can brain
forget your old physique and accept a completely new reality. That’s pretty
cool. A relatively low budget art science experiment can make brains forget
sex, physical build, and the sound of your own voice.
The brain displays astounding plasticity in its ability to
pick up new languages, patterns, and ideas, but this seems to strike another
level of impressive. The brain is so able to blur the boundaries between self
and other. What has been such a foundational human belief—that we are ourselves
and everyone else is someone else—is being put to trial by this type of
experimentation. Indeed we are developing new tools to study human sympathy
that can affect human sympathy.
Perhaps with gizmos like this becoming less experimental and
more practical, we will be forced to accept the existence of other people on an
entirely new level. We will be able to interact with someone else’s existence,
either a stranger or a brother. The ultimate scope of this experiment is far
from over. Technologies like this will continue to proliferate, and as they
grow, our minds will need to expand with them.
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