Empathy Swarm – Telehabitats

Root Event

Werkleitz Festival 2021 move to …

Parent Event

Root Event

Werkleitz Festival 2021 move to …

Root Event

Schaufenster in die Stadt Videorama
Empathy Swarm – Telehabitats
2018
Installationsansicht, Werkleitz Festival 2021 move to, Halle (Saale)
Foto: Falk Wenzel
Installationsansicht, Werkleitz Festival 2021 move to, Halle (Saale)
Foto: Falk Wenzel
Dokumentation der Arbeit Empathy Swarm – Telehabitats von EMAP Künstlern Adam Donovan (AU) & Katrin Hochschuh (DE) im Festivalgebäude in Halle (Saale)
Foto: Michel Klehm
Dokumentation der Arbeit Empathy Swarm – Telehabitats von EMAP Künstlern Adam Donovan (AU) & Katrin Hochschuh (DE) im Festivalgebäude in Halle (Saale)
Foto: Michel Klehm
Dokumentation der Arbeit Empathy Swarm – Telehabitats von EMAP Künstlern Adam Donovan (AU) & Katrin Hochschuh (DE) im Festivalgebäude in Halle (Saale)
Foto: Michel Klehm

Can robots feel empathy? The Artists Katrin Hochschuh and Adam Donovan address this question in their installation. A swarm of 50 robots adapts its behaviour and interacts with the observer using emotion recognition algorithms and camera tracking. Its formations, animations, and movements become the language of swarm expressions. The goal is to use deep learning to train the robots to respond compassionately to people’s facial expressions. As an antithesis or extension to humanoid robots like the famous “Sophia”, the artists show that non-anthropomorphic robots can also learn and produce a feeling of empathy and compassion. With a simple animated film, the psychologists Fritz Heider and Marianne Simmel had demonstrated back in 1944 how easy it is for the observer’s brain to associate emotional attachment to inanimate objects and how the human brain is hardwired for compassion. Based on this research, the installation is an experiment and social test on human-robot interaction.

This work was realised within the framework of the European Media Art Platforms (EMAP) programme at KONTEJNER (HR) with support of the Creative Europe Culture Programme of the European Union.

Interactive Installation Sculpture