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May 13, 2011
Kate Bush – Experiment IV
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May 9, 2011
Audio battlefield would prepare troops for combat or a typical Slayer concert
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Quoted from here
“Ever wondered how well playing Call of Duty at maximum volume mimics a real combat experience? Researchers at the Missouri University of Science and Technology must have asked a similar question, because they’ve built a 64-speaker surround-sound audio battlefield designed to train new troops. The system reproduces screaming fighter jets, rumbling tanks, and persistent gunfire — all the better to accommodate recruits to the overwhelming, disorienting cacophony of warfare. Veterans say even with the four large 20-hertz subwoofers, it’s nowhere near the real thing: combat volume is 25 percent louder than the average rock concert, at levels that can cause permanent hearing loss. Still, the creators say every bit of training helps; having near-combat experience is certainly better than none at all. So tell that to your neighbors next time they bang on your wall.”
May 9, 2011
Fear dulls our awareness of the nuances of sound
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Quoted from New Scientist articlehere
“You might think that being able to distinguish between a noise associated with danger and a similar but innocuous one would be a useful skill. Yet people find it hard to tell similar sounds apart if one is linked to a bad experience. The finding could help explain how people with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may become hypersensitive to certain types of sound.
Rony Paz and colleagues from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, repeatedly played one of two tones to volunteers. One group heard a tone followed by an unpleasant smell, the other a tone followed by a pleasant, melon-like odour. The team then tested how well each person could distinguish between the tones they had heard and similar sounds.
On average, those who had heard the sound that was followed by an unpleasant smell performed worse at this task. The effect persisted 24 hours later.
Evolutionary sense
This makes sense from an evolutionary point of view, says Paz. “If you hear a lion and you see a zebra get eaten, that should be enough for you to know that a lion is bad and to avoid it.” If you subsequently hear a different lion, you want your system to respond quickly to the threat rather than try to distinguish between the two lions.
Paz thinks this conditioning may involve rewiring of the amygdala, the part of the brain which controls the fear response. Understanding this mechanism could lead to better treatments for PTSD, he says.”
May 9, 2011
AUDiNT Episode 3: The Dead Record Office
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May 9, 2011
Can Art & Politics be Thought?
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The UCLA Program in Experimental Critical Theory and the Hammer Museum present a conference on June 4 & 5, 2011 at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles:
Can Art and Politics Be Thought? Practices, Possibilities, Pitfalls
Curated by Kenneth Reinhard and Drew Daniel
Featuring talks by
Alain Badiou (Being and Event, Logics of Worlds)
Matthew Barney (Cremaster, Drawing Restraint)
Lauren Berlant (The Female Complaint: The Unfinished Business of Sentimentality in American Culture, The Queen of America Goes to Washington City: Essays on Sex and Citizenship)
Joshua Clover (1989: Bob Dylan Didn’t Have This to Sing About, Madonna Anno Domini: Poems)
Joan Copjec (Read My Desire: Lacan against the Historicists, Imagine There’s No Woman: Ethics and Sublimation)
Drew Daniel (Throbbing Gristle’s Twenty Jazz Funk Greats, A Chance to Cut Is a Chance to Cure [Matmos])
Steve Goodman (Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear, Black Sun [Kode9])
Allan Sekula (Performance under Working Conditions, Polonia And Other Fables)
And featuring performances by Ultra-Red, Kode9, and Matmos (June 4)
And a reading of scenes from two plays by Alain Badiou, Incident at Antioch and Ahmed the Philosopher (June 5)
For more information go to http://ect.humnet.ucla.edu
October 28, 2010
Construct rather than critique
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Strange misreadings and grey vampirism aside, here is an interesting and constructive blog-post thinking around the concept of unsound.
October 11, 2010
i was going to write a response to halliwell’s review, but after reading it a few times, ive concluded that when he is not paraphrasing my argument, ive no idea what he is talking about (i would however like to congratulate him on the moral authority he seems to have assumed from watching Babylon)
August 26, 2010
Zones without people?
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I’m genuinely happy that someone has finally, negatively or positively, engaged with some of the philosophy in my book instead of slagging it off as being adolescent, with too many long words etc. etc.. The thing about reviews is that its often not worth wasting time on responding to them, unless they are so sloppily serious and willfully ignorant that they need straightening out. In this spirit, I will try to at least distastefully annotate this effort by Paul Halliwell over at Metamute at some point in the near future.
June 14, 2010
Capitalism & Schizophonia
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June 14, 2010
K-pop a direct declaration of war
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Someone called doogsgordon on twitter passed me this link to an article about South Korean psyops pumping loud K-pop into North Korea in retaliation for the recent torpedo attack on an S.K battleship. Full story
here
S.Korea recently put up loudspeakers in 11 locations along the tense border to resume broadcasts that had been suspended in 2004. The installation of the loudspeakers amounted to “a direct declaration of a war” and a “flagrant violation” of the inter-Korean declaration for peace and reconciliation signed in 2000, the North’s statement went on.
“Therefore, the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK will launch an all-out military strike to blow up the group’s means for the psychological warfare,” it said. The North has repeatedly threatened to strike down the loudspeakers if Seoul goes ahead with the broadcasts.