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Biohacking at the thresholds of the sensorial and
the political

FERNANDA DUARTE - NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Today I'm discussing the affects between the sensorial and the political in biotechnologies used to monitor the physiological performance of individuals. It is observed by scholarship in media,
culture and critical studies that the mesh of location aware technologies with pervasive information networks has enhanced the mobility of some people, places and things while stressing the immobile
condition and unequal accessibility of others. Issues about forms of surveillance, their pervasiveness, and the institutions to whom they are available arise as the possibilities to identify individual’s
current location, monitor traveling routes and create databases about individuals and places. Once the depth of pervasiveness reaches the biological body, it is required that specific discussions about
surveillance, safety and privacy are developed to deal with ethical issues of biological disclosure. Bio-nanotechnologies are being developed in ways that we, as individuals not only populate a location
in space, but that our physiological data, as it is fed out to the network, becomes another variable to shape how individuals perform in it. We know the dangers of sharing our credit card information on
the internet and we all worry about the odds of having this and other personal information disclosed. Which concerns arise when the data that is shared regards health information and discloses how our
physiology performs?
The inclusion of the body as a site of networked computation brings the scale of pervasive computing to a micro scale of molecular biology, and extends whatever power networks and politics of
mobility to reach into the body.
ubiquitous computing,
pervasive computing,
physical computing,
tangible media,
everyware,
wetware.

(Weiser, 1991, dourish&bell, 2011, greenfield, 2006)

Thursday, February 6, 2014
Recent developments in pervasive computing, such as embedded microchips and nanobiotechnologies, endows practices of mapping that do not only collect information about the physical
space, but also about the physical body that inhabits that space. Biotechnology applications, currently under development, are able to monitor physiological functions, such as heart rate and stress levels,
promote more seamless augmented reality interfaces through contact lenses and even assist visually impaired to exercise their mobility through the implant of sonar sensors. Other biometric applications
are also devoted to find more precise ways to identify individuals. Such practices tell us about forms of knowledge and mapping practices that challenge the notions of space, as a mere geographic
coordinate, and the body, as a node in a network. The body becomes a space to e mapped and governed. In order to discuss possible implications, I present a few examples of prototypes currently under
development to look at the power dynamics that animate the relationships of the biotechnological arrangement and the sensorial experience also at a molecular level. These groups are of medical
applications that allow the individual to care for herself; and of institutional, governmental applications that allow the care of a population.
Alexandra Institute in collaboration with the Aarhus School of Engineering School in
Denmark

Thursday, February 6, 2014
MIKAT, for example is a bio-sensor based application designed for the Iphone that enables patients to monitor levels of anxiety before they evolve into panic attacks. Based on body sensors, the app
reports regularly on the patient’s body stress levels and heart rate and feeds the user with exercises and therapeutic techniques based on cognitive behavioral therapy. On the verge of a panic attack the
data is shared with the physician who is able to take the necessary measures to care for the patient.
implantable
silicon-silk
electronics and
tattoos with blood
sugar readings

University of Pennsylvania

Thursday, February 6, 2014
A more pervasive interface for emotional regulation is under development at the University of Pensylvania where silk-silicon electronics function as arrays of conformable electrodes that interface with
the nervous system and administer "corrections" to attend situations of distress. The same silk silicon technology can be also added with LEDs that might act as photonic tattoos that show blood-sugar
readings.

The motivations to intermesh the biological body with computing capacities are many. First, it leverages the body as a more efficient platform for mobile services. In fact, the development of wearable
computers is strongly invested by the need of allowing us to multitask face to face and remotely, guided by the western social push for a more productive and dynamic work force. Also, more pervasive
computing features enable the body of the individual to be precisely pinpointed in space and time. The use of biometrics in border control checkpoints demonstrate how discourses of safety and risk are
articulated through more precise forms to trace how targeted populations move and occupy space. Even though the technology has been developing to give us more control over what surrounds us, what
happens inside our bodies is still opaque to us. The miniaturization of pervasive technologies is allowing that we not only hack space but that we also hack the biological body.
InVivo
NanoPlatform
DARPA, USA

Thursday, February 6, 2014
In Vivo NanoPlatform is a nanotechnology platform for medical health under development by DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, USA). DARPA is an agency of the United States
Department of Defense responsible for the development of new technologies for use by the military. DARPA has been responsible for funding the development of many technologies which have had a
major effect on the world, including the hypertext system, the internet, and graphical user interface.
The platform is under development since March 2012 and aims to be an efficient diagnosis and treatment alternative to soldiers in the battlefield. It consists of implantable therapeutic nanotechnologies
made of biocompatible, nontoxic materials. Besides re-establishing injured or sick soldiers, the In Vivo Nanoplatform aims to be a constant monitoring system that is aware of the physiology of the body
and is also environment sensitive to avoid the spread of infectious diseases among soldiers.
Unique Identification Authority,
India

Thursday, February 6, 2014
Finally, I would like to mention the use of a sophisticated biometrics database by the Unique Identification Authority (UIAI) in India. Even though the implementation of fingerprint databases dates back
to 1858 in London, the Indian Government is implementing a state of the art biometrics system (fingerprints, iris, facial recognition) and demographic information to assign a 12-digit lifetime
identification number to each individual. The Indian initiative is the biggest national registry in the world in terms of scale and accuracy and is planned taking in consideration technologies that are
appropriate to the contrasts of India's social and economic reality. The database is shared between public and private agencies to promote access to public and private services, generate statistics
regarding the population, monitor the transit across Indian territory and also the mobility of one of the world's greatest population.

Once the body is networked and the biotechnological arrangement that makes that connection possible is pervasive to the point that the appearance of the biological body does not hint on her connected
condition, which are the consequences of this fractalized flesh to the individual body? If the performance of the individual body is able to be monitored in the level of physiological data, does it imply in
the installation of an internal surveillance system? Which are the dangers - a renewed eugenics - and potentials - health accountability - of such level of monitoring?
A cyborguian construct will be one that doesnt function in the
local space it occupies, or even within n the boundaries of
its own skin but through distributed agency remotely
accessed and prompted from multiple locations.

body hacking,
gene mapping
and soon neuro-jacking.

Stelarc

Thursday, February 6, 2014
Haraway	
  (1985)	
  sees	
  the	
  cyborg	
  as	
  representa7ve	
  to	
  our	
  condi7on	
  as	
  social	
  subjects,	
  as	
  'a	
  creature	
  of	
  both	
  fic7on	
  and	
  lived	
  social	
  reality’	
  (65).	
  She	
  uses	
  the	
  figure	
  of	
  the	
  cyborg	
  to	
  advocate	
  against	
  
essen7alist	
  posi7ons,	
  let	
  them	
  be	
  biological	
  or	
  technological	
  determined,	
  depar7ng	
  from	
  the	
  premise	
  that	
  we	
  are	
  all	
  con7ngently	
  materialis7c	
  poli7cal	
  cons7tuted	
  chimeras.	
  To	
  prove	
  her	
  argument	
  
on	
  our	
  co-­‐cons7tu7ve	
  technogenesis,	
  she	
  reminds	
  us	
  of	
  the	
  latest	
  advances	
  in	
  nano	
  technology	
  and	
  quan7c	
  theory	
  models	
  that	
  demonstrate	
  the	
  imprecisions	
  between	
  physical	
  and	
  non	
  physical	
  
boundaries.	
  Haraway's	
  cyborg	
  can	
  be	
  thought	
  as	
  a	
  model	
  of	
  subjec7fica7on	
  that	
  is	
  ‘a	
  poli7cal	
  exercise	
  of	
  the	
  interrela7onship	
  between	
  science,	
  technology	
  and	
  power	
  as	
  a	
  ‘matrix	
  of	
  complex	
  
domina7ons’	
  (Haraway,	
  1985,p100)	
  built	
  upon	
  otherness	
  and	
  difference.	
  
	
  

Such	
  matrix,	
  Munster	
  (2006)	
  argues,	
  as	
  much	
  as	
  it	
  breaks	
  free	
  from	
  a	
  Cartesian-­‐ra7onalist	
  model	
  of	
  the	
  subject,	
  it	
  must	
  not	
  dispose	
  of	
  the	
  sensorial	
  capaci7es	
  of	
  bodies.	
  She	
  calls	
  for	
  an	
  

understanding	
  of	
  a	
  techno-­‐digital	
  body	
  that	
  ques7ons	
  the	
  binary	
  separa7on	
  between	
  the	
  virtual	
  and	
  the	
  'real',	
  and	
  more	
  radically,	
  the	
  physical/biological	
  and	
  the	
  machinical/computa7onal.	
  She	
  asks	
  
“What	
  if	
  we	
  were	
  to	
  produce	
  instead	
  a	
  different	
  genealogy	
  for	
  digital	
  engagements	
  with	
  the	
  machine,	
  one	
  that	
  gave	
  us	
  the	
  room	
  to	
  take	
  body,	
  sensa7on,	
  movement	
  and	
  condi7ons	
  such	
  as	
  place	
  and	
  
dura7on	
  into	
  account?”	
  (Munster,	
  2006,	
  p3).	
  With	
  that,	
  Munster	
  (2006)	
  proposes	
  an	
  understanding	
  of	
  biotechnological	
  bodies	
  as	
  ongoing	
  embodiments,	
  understood	
  as	
  a	
  process	
  more	
  than	
  a	
  stable	
  
state.	
  But	
  also	
  includes	
  movement,	
  dura7on	
  and	
  place	
  into	
  the	
  prac7ce	
  of	
  embodiment.	
  Manning	
  (2009)	
  echoes	
  Munster's	
  (2006)	
  argument	
  when	
  she	
  says	
  that	
  a	
  body	
  is	
  an	
  event,	
  a	
  dura7on,	
  a	
  
taking	
  form	
  in	
  space,	
  plas7c	
  rhythms.	
  By	
  its	
  ac7on	
  in	
  space,	
  bodies	
  create	
  rela7onscapes	
  that	
  are	
  built	
  upon	
  “dynamic	
  cross-­‐genesis	
  of	
  the	
  body	
  and	
  its	
  constructed	
  environment,	
  where	
  the	
  
environment	
  is	
  taken	
  to	
  include	
  not	
  only	
  the	
  architectural	
  surround	
  but	
  also	
  technological	
  and	
  cultural	
  extensions	
  of	
  it”	
  (p2).	
  The	
  ways	
  in	
  which	
  we	
  interact	
  with	
  space	
  construct	
  not	
  only	
  the	
  ways	
  we	
  
"house"	
  in	
  the	
  body	
  or	
  the	
  milieus	
  we	
  are	
  embedded	
  in,	
  but	
  also	
  our	
  modes	
  of	
  thought.	
  The	
  occupa7on	
  of	
  physical	
  space	
  of	
  flesh	
  and	
  the	
  physical	
  occupa7on	
  of	
  architectural	
  space	
  render	
  some	
  sort	
  
of	
  a	
  micropoli7cs	
  that	
  shape	
  our	
  capaci7es	
  of	
  self	
  reflec7on	
  about	
  our	
  embodied	
  condi7on.	
  For	
  this	
  reason	
  it	
  is	
  cri7cal	
  that	
  scholarship	
  regarding	
  contemporary	
  no7ons	
  of	
  space	
  making	
  take	
  into	
  
considera7on	
  our	
  technogene7c	
  condi7on.
Ping Body, Stelarc

Thursday, February 6, 2014
In the merging of molecular biology and computer science where “life is understood as data, flesh rendered programmable” technological protocols and the politics of life are co-constitutive as technical
and social regulators of social practices.
To conclude, I approach these examples of pervasive biotechnologies understanding that bodies are not fixed entities. Biotechnological embodiments are not biological bodies added with technological
gadgets. They are metastable saturations where bodies don’t move across space - as autonomous, discrete unities; but create space - as they are part of its becoming. It is with this purpose that I call for
a discussion of biotechnogenesis that is aware of the non- representational biological and sensorial capacities of the body. The networked biotechnological body can be thought as a performative body
that does not traverse space but enacts it, unfolds in/with it. Its corporeal experience is not limited to the physical location of the body nor the limits of its skin. Its actions are distributed across the
network in different locations and locally enacted according to the desires of the network. In this way, biotechnological arrangements can be thought can also be thought through its corporeal, the
discursive and the normative affects.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Metalosis Maligna
a “mock“ documentary by Floris Kaayk about a future where a
disease which affects patients with medical implants
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Thursday, February 6, 2014
obrigada!
Thanks!
Fernanda Duarte
CAPES and Fulbright Scholar
North Carolina State University
fduarte@ncsu.edu
TWT @freducs
Thursday, February 6, 2014

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Nca pres saturday

  • 1. Biohacking at the thresholds of the sensorial and the political FERNANDA DUARTE - NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY Thursday, February 6, 2014 Today I'm discussing the affects between the sensorial and the political in biotechnologies used to monitor the physiological performance of individuals. It is observed by scholarship in media, culture and critical studies that the mesh of location aware technologies with pervasive information networks has enhanced the mobility of some people, places and things while stressing the immobile condition and unequal accessibility of others. Issues about forms of surveillance, their pervasiveness, and the institutions to whom they are available arise as the possibilities to identify individual’s current location, monitor traveling routes and create databases about individuals and places. Once the depth of pervasiveness reaches the biological body, it is required that specific discussions about surveillance, safety and privacy are developed to deal with ethical issues of biological disclosure. Bio-nanotechnologies are being developed in ways that we, as individuals not only populate a location in space, but that our physiological data, as it is fed out to the network, becomes another variable to shape how individuals perform in it. We know the dangers of sharing our credit card information on the internet and we all worry about the odds of having this and other personal information disclosed. Which concerns arise when the data that is shared regards health information and discloses how our physiology performs? The inclusion of the body as a site of networked computation brings the scale of pervasive computing to a micro scale of molecular biology, and extends whatever power networks and politics of mobility to reach into the body.
  • 2. ubiquitous computing, pervasive computing, physical computing, tangible media, everyware, wetware. (Weiser, 1991, dourish&bell, 2011, greenfield, 2006) Thursday, February 6, 2014 Recent developments in pervasive computing, such as embedded microchips and nanobiotechnologies, endows practices of mapping that do not only collect information about the physical space, but also about the physical body that inhabits that space. Biotechnology applications, currently under development, are able to monitor physiological functions, such as heart rate and stress levels, promote more seamless augmented reality interfaces through contact lenses and even assist visually impaired to exercise their mobility through the implant of sonar sensors. Other biometric applications are also devoted to find more precise ways to identify individuals. Such practices tell us about forms of knowledge and mapping practices that challenge the notions of space, as a mere geographic coordinate, and the body, as a node in a network. The body becomes a space to e mapped and governed. In order to discuss possible implications, I present a few examples of prototypes currently under development to look at the power dynamics that animate the relationships of the biotechnological arrangement and the sensorial experience also at a molecular level. These groups are of medical applications that allow the individual to care for herself; and of institutional, governmental applications that allow the care of a population.
  • 3. Alexandra Institute in collaboration with the Aarhus School of Engineering School in Denmark Thursday, February 6, 2014 MIKAT, for example is a bio-sensor based application designed for the Iphone that enables patients to monitor levels of anxiety before they evolve into panic attacks. Based on body sensors, the app reports regularly on the patient’s body stress levels and heart rate and feeds the user with exercises and therapeutic techniques based on cognitive behavioral therapy. On the verge of a panic attack the data is shared with the physician who is able to take the necessary measures to care for the patient.
  • 4. implantable silicon-silk electronics and tattoos with blood sugar readings University of Pennsylvania Thursday, February 6, 2014 A more pervasive interface for emotional regulation is under development at the University of Pensylvania where silk-silicon electronics function as arrays of conformable electrodes that interface with the nervous system and administer "corrections" to attend situations of distress. The same silk silicon technology can be also added with LEDs that might act as photonic tattoos that show blood-sugar readings. The motivations to intermesh the biological body with computing capacities are many. First, it leverages the body as a more efficient platform for mobile services. In fact, the development of wearable computers is strongly invested by the need of allowing us to multitask face to face and remotely, guided by the western social push for a more productive and dynamic work force. Also, more pervasive computing features enable the body of the individual to be precisely pinpointed in space and time. The use of biometrics in border control checkpoints demonstrate how discourses of safety and risk are articulated through more precise forms to trace how targeted populations move and occupy space. Even though the technology has been developing to give us more control over what surrounds us, what happens inside our bodies is still opaque to us. The miniaturization of pervasive technologies is allowing that we not only hack space but that we also hack the biological body.
  • 5. InVivo NanoPlatform DARPA, USA Thursday, February 6, 2014 In Vivo NanoPlatform is a nanotechnology platform for medical health under development by DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, USA). DARPA is an agency of the United States Department of Defense responsible for the development of new technologies for use by the military. DARPA has been responsible for funding the development of many technologies which have had a major effect on the world, including the hypertext system, the internet, and graphical user interface. The platform is under development since March 2012 and aims to be an efficient diagnosis and treatment alternative to soldiers in the battlefield. It consists of implantable therapeutic nanotechnologies made of biocompatible, nontoxic materials. Besides re-establishing injured or sick soldiers, the In Vivo Nanoplatform aims to be a constant monitoring system that is aware of the physiology of the body and is also environment sensitive to avoid the spread of infectious diseases among soldiers.
  • 6. Unique Identification Authority, India Thursday, February 6, 2014 Finally, I would like to mention the use of a sophisticated biometrics database by the Unique Identification Authority (UIAI) in India. Even though the implementation of fingerprint databases dates back to 1858 in London, the Indian Government is implementing a state of the art biometrics system (fingerprints, iris, facial recognition) and demographic information to assign a 12-digit lifetime identification number to each individual. The Indian initiative is the biggest national registry in the world in terms of scale and accuracy and is planned taking in consideration technologies that are appropriate to the contrasts of India's social and economic reality. The database is shared between public and private agencies to promote access to public and private services, generate statistics regarding the population, monitor the transit across Indian territory and also the mobility of one of the world's greatest population. Once the body is networked and the biotechnological arrangement that makes that connection possible is pervasive to the point that the appearance of the biological body does not hint on her connected condition, which are the consequences of this fractalized flesh to the individual body? If the performance of the individual body is able to be monitored in the level of physiological data, does it imply in the installation of an internal surveillance system? Which are the dangers - a renewed eugenics - and potentials - health accountability - of such level of monitoring?
  • 7. A cyborguian construct will be one that doesnt function in the local space it occupies, or even within n the boundaries of its own skin but through distributed agency remotely accessed and prompted from multiple locations. body hacking, gene mapping and soon neuro-jacking. Stelarc Thursday, February 6, 2014 Haraway  (1985)  sees  the  cyborg  as  representa7ve  to  our  condi7on  as  social  subjects,  as  'a  creature  of  both  fic7on  and  lived  social  reality’  (65).  She  uses  the  figure  of  the  cyborg  to  advocate  against   essen7alist  posi7ons,  let  them  be  biological  or  technological  determined,  depar7ng  from  the  premise  that  we  are  all  con7ngently  materialis7c  poli7cal  cons7tuted  chimeras.  To  prove  her  argument   on  our  co-­‐cons7tu7ve  technogenesis,  she  reminds  us  of  the  latest  advances  in  nano  technology  and  quan7c  theory  models  that  demonstrate  the  imprecisions  between  physical  and  non  physical   boundaries.  Haraway's  cyborg  can  be  thought  as  a  model  of  subjec7fica7on  that  is  ‘a  poli7cal  exercise  of  the  interrela7onship  between  science,  technology  and  power  as  a  ‘matrix  of  complex   domina7ons’  (Haraway,  1985,p100)  built  upon  otherness  and  difference.     Such  matrix,  Munster  (2006)  argues,  as  much  as  it  breaks  free  from  a  Cartesian-­‐ra7onalist  model  of  the  subject,  it  must  not  dispose  of  the  sensorial  capaci7es  of  bodies.  She  calls  for  an   understanding  of  a  techno-­‐digital  body  that  ques7ons  the  binary  separa7on  between  the  virtual  and  the  'real',  and  more  radically,  the  physical/biological  and  the  machinical/computa7onal.  She  asks   “What  if  we  were  to  produce  instead  a  different  genealogy  for  digital  engagements  with  the  machine,  one  that  gave  us  the  room  to  take  body,  sensa7on,  movement  and  condi7ons  such  as  place  and   dura7on  into  account?”  (Munster,  2006,  p3).  With  that,  Munster  (2006)  proposes  an  understanding  of  biotechnological  bodies  as  ongoing  embodiments,  understood  as  a  process  more  than  a  stable   state.  But  also  includes  movement,  dura7on  and  place  into  the  prac7ce  of  embodiment.  Manning  (2009)  echoes  Munster's  (2006)  argument  when  she  says  that  a  body  is  an  event,  a  dura7on,  a   taking  form  in  space,  plas7c  rhythms.  By  its  ac7on  in  space,  bodies  create  rela7onscapes  that  are  built  upon  “dynamic  cross-­‐genesis  of  the  body  and  its  constructed  environment,  where  the   environment  is  taken  to  include  not  only  the  architectural  surround  but  also  technological  and  cultural  extensions  of  it”  (p2).  The  ways  in  which  we  interact  with  space  construct  not  only  the  ways  we   "house"  in  the  body  or  the  milieus  we  are  embedded  in,  but  also  our  modes  of  thought.  The  occupa7on  of  physical  space  of  flesh  and  the  physical  occupa7on  of  architectural  space  render  some  sort   of  a  micropoli7cs  that  shape  our  capaci7es  of  self  reflec7on  about  our  embodied  condi7on.  For  this  reason  it  is  cri7cal  that  scholarship  regarding  contemporary  no7ons  of  space  making  take  into   considera7on  our  technogene7c  condi7on.
  • 8. Ping Body, Stelarc Thursday, February 6, 2014 In the merging of molecular biology and computer science where “life is understood as data, flesh rendered programmable” technological protocols and the politics of life are co-constitutive as technical and social regulators of social practices. To conclude, I approach these examples of pervasive biotechnologies understanding that bodies are not fixed entities. Biotechnological embodiments are not biological bodies added with technological gadgets. They are metastable saturations where bodies don’t move across space - as autonomous, discrete unities; but create space - as they are part of its becoming. It is with this purpose that I call for a discussion of biotechnogenesis that is aware of the non- representational biological and sensorial capacities of the body. The networked biotechnological body can be thought as a performative body that does not traverse space but enacts it, unfolds in/with it. Its corporeal experience is not limited to the physical location of the body nor the limits of its skin. Its actions are distributed across the network in different locations and locally enacted according to the desires of the network. In this way, biotechnological arrangements can be thought can also be thought through its corporeal, the discursive and the normative affects.
  • 12. Metalosis Maligna a “mock“ documentary by Floris Kaayk about a future where a disease which affects patients with medical implants Thursday, February 6, 2014
  • 14. obrigada! Thanks! Fernanda Duarte CAPES and Fulbright Scholar North Carolina State University fduarte@ncsu.edu TWT @freducs Thursday, February 6, 2014