Poster
A Typology for Identifying Digitally-Induced Altered States of Consciousness Through Input Discrepancy
Authors: Belousov, Anatolii; Ojell-Jarventausta, Terho; Bujic, Mila; Macey, Joseph; Hamari, Juho
Conference name: Mindtrek '24
Publisher: ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
Publishing place: NEW YORK
Publication year: 2024
Journal: ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries
Book title : PROCEEDINGS OF THE 27TH INTERNATIONAL ACADEMIC MINDTREK CONFERENCE
First page : 249
Last page: 253
Number of pages: 5
eISBN: 979-8-4007-1823-6
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1145/3681716.3689443
Web address : https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3681716.3689443
The development of digital technologies leads to new types of relationships between the digital world and human consciousness, increasingly inducing or influencing specific types of experiences, such as dreams, transcendental experiences, or derealisation. The varied devices used to induce these experiences, from brain-stimulating magnets to biofeedback-based VR headsets, constitute a new class of digital technologies. They are already starting to be utilised in various spheres of life from medicine to art. However, the full potential of technologies is only beginning to be revealed and implementations are somewhat limited; accordingly, researchers in the field must use alternative strategies when investigating the potential evolution of this phenomenon. Making use of speculative or fictional narratives is one productive approach. Finding relevant technologies within narratives has some challenges and requires a more specific criterion for defining this phenomenon. This work in progress suggests the conceptualization of altered states of consciousness (ASC) through the lens of the relationship between external input and processor as a practical strategy for identifying digitally-induced altered states of consciousness (DIAL). It provides "discrepancy of input" as a flexible navigational criterion that will help include unknown technologies into the discussion about altered states of consciousness. The implementation of the criterion is demonstrated in specific examples of identification technologies from sci-fi worlds.
Funding information in the publication:
This work is supported by Kone Foundation (DIAL, 202008478) and Research Council of Finland grants 342144 and 353268.