Level:
Expert
Format:
Talk

Hyperthymesia is a neurological condition that bestows near-perfect recall on those who are afflicted with it. One of the most famous hyperthymesia cases is Jill Price, a 45 year old school administrator from California. She is able to remember everything that happened to her from 1980 onwards, everything. Huffington Post writes about this case and the condition as do others in cases from the Daily Mail the Telegraph and the BBC

Like Eidetic memory, Hyperthymesia has some really impressive quality but some unpleasant downsides – especially reliving the daily grind, embarrassing situations and other times which you would prefer to forget. There is a fascinating article Why Women Recall Emotional Events Better Than Men Do which continues the theme about some people’s ability to remember different things and the ability to recall them.

One rule (of 33 so far documented) of the living in a digital age is that the internet is written in ink and has “total recall” – once there you cannot take is back and as Zackerberg’s sister Randi found out you cannot depend on privacy settings.

Forgiven not forgotten was song by The Corrs way back but with it comes a thought about digital etiquette.

In a time when we may not be able to ignore that all the facts are there and accessible to anyone; how prepared are we to forgive as if someone has access to recall everything and everything about your life, our lives could become very untidy as we spend more time justifying our past than moving forward. Whilst the media loves to hold politicians to account for U turns (a change of opinion or direction) even if it is based on new facts, more experience, a change in environment or plan wrong, are we heading for a time of becoming more tolerant and if so how will this affect our views on privacy and indeed personal data? Further, since our chemistry and experience also affect our ability to forgive, should we focus on forgetting first?

Questions answered :
what are the new rules for living / surviving in a digital age?

Level:
Intermediate
Format:
Workshops

Investigate and play with your relativity to others in online virtual spaces

During this creative-thinking session we will collectively explore issues of identity, communication and team work for the 21st century through immersive telepresence and virtual environments. Imagine a future unbound by the two dimensional head and shoulders of today’s video communication, into a world of full bodied haptic feedback, 3d immersive spaces and interaction mediated communication.

Avatars are the representations we create of ourselves in virtual worlds. They are central to our modern lifestyles: we work, play, explore and share with one another using these digital bodies. Telepresence can be utilised to enhance and extend future work and play environments and allow the physical live body to be engaged simultaneously with another body at a distance, creating intimacy and build trust as it encourages an evolving expression of yourself and others.

Join us for a playful group debate and idea-sharing exercises!

Questions Answered:
- How do we choose to represent ourselves, interact and behave in virtual world and which impact does it have on our identity?

- How do you act and connect to the others in a remote connection situation?

- How can we learn from next generations on dealing with multiple physical/virtual identities?

Speaker Bio: Coming from a background in dance/body and technology, Leanne is Associate Director/Creative Producer at body>data>space with extensive experience in running virtual/physical workshops, actively engaging participants, encouraging them to co-create, experiment and share. body>data>space is an East London design collective creating innovative connections between performance, architecture, new media and virtual worlds. We create, share and extend future scenarios of virtual/physical bl
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