Haplós: Towards Technologies for and Applications of Somaesthetics

dc.contributor.author Maranan, Diego S.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-03-22T05:13:33Z
dc.date.available 2024-03-22T05:13:33Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.description Portions of chapters 2 and 4 have been previously published in the following article: Maranan, D. S. (2015). Speculative somatics. Technoetic Arts, 13(3), 291–300. https://doi.org/10.1386/tear.13.3.291_1. This thesis expands on the material presented in the publication. This study was carried out in collaboration with industry partner Kin (UK). This research was supported by the Marie Curie Initial Training Network, FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN, grant number 604764 and carried out in collaboration with Kin (UK).
dc.description.abstract How can vibrotactile stimuli be used to create a technology-mediated somatic learning experience? This question motivates this practice-based research, which explores how the Feldenkrais Method and cognate neuroscience research can be applied to technology design. Supported by somaesthetic philosophy, soma-based design theories, and a critical acknowledgement of the socially-inflected body, the research develops a systematic method grounded in first- and third-person accounts of embodied experience to inform the creation and evaluation of design of Haplós, a wearable, user-customisable, remote-controlled technology that plays methodically composed vibrotactile patterns on the skin in order to facilitate body awareness—the major outcome of this research and a significant contribution to soma-based creative work. The research also contributes to design theory and somatic practice by developing the notion of a somatic learning affordance, which emerged during course of the research and which describes the capacity of a material object to facilitate somatic learning. Two interdisciplinary collaborations involving Haplós contribute to additional fields and disciplines. In partnership with experimental psychologists, Haplós was used in a randomised controlled study that contributes to cognitive psychology by showing that vibrotactile compositions can reduce, with statistical significance, intrusive food-related thoughts. Haplós was also used in Bisensorial, an award-winning, collaboratively developed proof-of-concept of a neuroadaptive vibroacoustic therapeutic device that uses music and vibrotactile stimuli to induce desired mental states. Finally, this research contributes to cognitive science and embodied philosophy by advancing a neuroscientific understanding of vibrotactile somaesthetics, a novel extension of somaesthetic philosophy.
dc.identifier.citation Maranan, D. S. (2017). Haplós: Towards Technologies for and Applications of Somaesthetics [Ph.D. Thesis, Plymouth University]. https://dx.doi.org/10.24382/817
dc.identifier.doi 10.24382/817
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13073/946
dc.title Haplós: Towards Technologies for and Applications of Somaesthetics
dc.type Thesis
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