Publication | Closed Access
Revealing Personhood Through Biomusic of Individuals Without Communicative Interaction Ability
14
Citations
15
References
2011
Year
MusicDriven Musical ExpressionAuditory ImageryComputational MusicologyPersonhood Through BiomusicAffective DesignAffective NeuroscienceCommunicationSocial SciencesPsychologyAffective ComputingVocal MusicMusic ProcessingQuantified SelfCognitive ScienceSpeech PerceptionSocial InteractionSpeech CommunicationHuman CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationHuman InteractionHuman-computer InteractionSocial Interactionist TheoryArtsEmotion
An increasing number of people are unable to engage in communicative interactions because of their inability to move, speak, and control traditional augmentative and alternative communication devices. According to social interactionist theory, the existence of the human self hinges on successful interaction with others; consequently, those who cannot interact are at risk of not being accorded personhood. This article is a request for research towards the development of technologies that would give caregivers access to the autonomic physiological signals of individuals who are unable to communicate. It explores the hypothesis that meaningful manifestation of signals that change according to mental and emotional states will reveal individual personhood. We hypothesize that music is ideally suited as the basis of interaction with this population, and that physiologically driven musical expression is a form of individual biomusic that can enrich social interaction.
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