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Discerning Relational Data in Breath Patterns. Gilbert Simondon’s Philosophy in the Context of Sequence Transduction
Author(s) -
Lisa Müller-Trede
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
matter
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2604-7551
DOI - 10.1344/jnmr.v3i1.38961
Subject(s) - cognitive science , transduction (biophysics) , individuation , grasp , perception , context (archaeology) , computer science , communication , artificial intelligence , psychology , neuroscience , paleontology , biochemistry , chemistry , psychoanalysis , biology , programming language
This article discusses Gilbert Simondon’s philosophies of the technical object, information, and individuation to frame the potential inherent in a practical application of his notions of intensity, amplification, and transduction of relational processes, which have been largely neglected in the traditions of substantialist and hylomorphic thought. Specifically, the study introduces a method to discern relational information by amplifying audible breath patterns of a collective via a wearable digital stethoscope (WDS). The non-lexical modality of the breath grants insights into non-verbal phases of communication during which multiple points of view may exist simultaneously. These points of view can be understood as a subject’s sense of orientation within phases prior to signification, i.e., before affect becomes a specific emotion and before perception becomes a concrete action—using the terms as they are defined by Simondon. Bodily movement is audible within the breath and can be further transcribed into preliminary signs with the help of a sequence transduction machine learning (ML) model. Discerning semiosis within audible breath patterns exemplifies a logic of computation which is not concerned with quantitative and qualitative information but, instead, computes intense data to grasp relational dynamics.

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