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This Is Not a Building: Architecting the Spectrality of the Latent Space
AI and its operations might be perceived as series of fields of almost infinite latencies – of possibilities and potential times of dataset flowerings or bloomings – that are programmable but still surprising. Assistant Professor of Architecture at Texas A&M University Benjamin Ennemoser and Innsbruck University‐ based architect and researcher Ingrid Mayrhofer‐Hufnagl explain this concept, its implications for architectural creativity and our newfound ability to operate in an interstitial, fluid space between matter and bits and bytes.
This Is Not a Building: Architecting the Spectrality of the Latent Space
AI and its operations might be perceived as series of fields of almost infinite latencies – of possibilities and potential times of dataset flowerings or bloomings – that are programmable but still surprising. Assistant Professor of Architecture at Texas A&M University Benjamin Ennemoser and Innsbruck University‐ based architect and researcher Ingrid Mayrhofer‐Hufnagl explain this concept, its implications for architectural creativity and our newfound ability to operate in an interstitial, fluid space between matter and bits and bytes.
This Is Not a Building: Architecting the Spectrality of the Latent Space
Ennemoser, Benjamin (author) / Mayrhofer‐Hufnagl, Ingrid (author)
Architectural Design ; 94 ; 78-85
2024-05-01
1 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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