The media multiverse and adaptive virtuality

Peter Dallow

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperChapter

    Abstract

    New mediated virtual worlds have created a changed context for ‹interpretive perception›. Each advance in mediated communications alters our perceptual range, our sense of our world, our relation to time and space. We increasingly conflate the real and the virtual, the natural and the artificial. The depth, range and reach of networked digital media, and their virtualised inputs and outputs have been so dispersed into so many facets of everyday life, that this new status constitutes a new media multiverse. The distance of human subjects from the media has so collapsed, as to make it difficult to distinguish media from the whole of life. Media immersion has become a fact of everyday life. The adaptive virtuality of the new networked media creates a powerful amalgam of social immediacy and mediated experiences in everyday situations. But there is little in the way of established critical practices for understanding how the ever present, shifting cultural practices of digital media have altered our perception and how we attempt to communicate.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationJahrbuch Immersiver Medien 2011— Immersion: Abgrenzung, Annaherung, Erkundung = Yearbook of Immersive Media 2011 —Immersion: Classifications, Definitions and Explorations
    EditorsTobias Hochscherf, Heidi Kjär, Patrick Rupert-Kruse, Eduard Thomas
    Place of PublicationGermany
    PublisherSchüren Verlag
    Pages63-75
    Number of pages13
    ISBN (Print)9783894727451
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

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