|

20180420_amatria-pic.jpg

It took about 200 volunteers including students from several different IU schools to put the massive piece together (Lindsey Wright/WTIU-WFIU News).

Read original article.



Indiana University’s new School of Informatics, Computing and Engineering building, Luddy Hall, is officially open after last week’s dedication ceremony.


But one particular element of the state-of-the-art building stands out.


“Amatria” is the name of the new “sentient” art sculpture, and it’s located in a glass atrium space on the building’s fourth floor.


Katy Börner, an information science and engineering professor at IU, says the massive piece senses people as they walk past and even greets and interacts with them.


“Amatria is made out of many different types of materials,” Börner says. “You might see many plastic pieces, you see scaffolds made out of metal, you also see glass vessels filled with vinegar serving as vinegar batteries.”



Phillip Beesley, a Canadian architect and artist, created the massive sculpture. There are sensors throughout and even microphones that sense audio levels. It senses you as you walk past and processes the information. As it reacts, parts of the piece start to vibrate, light up, or make a zapping sound.


Amatria then processes those interactions and ultimately learns new ways to communicate with folks over time. Börner says some PhD students are analyzing the data received from the sculpture to learn what those changes look like, so this is just the beginning.


“We want arts and humanities scholars to interact with Amatria and to help us all understand how to design these smarter environments, how to implement artificial intelligence systems and ultimately how to use them so we all have a much more desirable future,” Börner says. “So we hope just like the Sample Gates, an icon for Indiana University Bloomington, I think Amatria could be a symbol for renaissance engineering here at Indiana University.”


There’s even an opportunity for middle and high school students to learn about this kind of technology.


The Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering is hosting summer camps where students can learn about artificial intelligence. They’ll be able to build small form versions of Amatria.


The camps will be held in Luddy Hall.



Katy Börner, an information science and engineering professor at IU, says the massive piece senses people as they walk past and even greets and interacts with them. (Lindsey Wright/WFIU-WTIU News)

Thank you to our generous sponsors: