Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?

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Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency? / Due, Brian Lystgaard.

2021. 25-26 Abstract from Digitalizing Social Practices: Changes and Consequences, Odense / Online, Denmark.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Due, BL 2021, 'Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?', Digitalizing Social Practices: Changes and Consequences, Odense / Online, Denmark, 23/02/2021 - 24/02/2021 pp. 25-26.

APA

Due, B. L. (2021). Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?. 25-26. Abstract from Digitalizing Social Practices: Changes and Consequences, Odense / Online, Denmark.

Vancouver

Due BL. Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?. 2021. Abstract from Digitalizing Social Practices: Changes and Consequences, Odense / Online, Denmark.

Author

Due, Brian Lystgaard. / Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?. Abstract from Digitalizing Social Practices: Changes and Consequences, Odense / Online, Denmark.

Bibtex

@conference{e9b7bba5472f49029756a0d9899f5286,
title = "Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?",
abstract = "This paper introduces a framework based on EMCA and semiotics related to practices concerned with perception. This is subsumed under the title: semiotics of distributed perception. It will be argued in this presentation, that perception is not just a private, cognitive experience based on one{\textquoteright}s own motor skills and interpretation of sensory input, but achieved in and through practical communicative actions in co-operation with other agents. Based on years of video ethnographic research conducted among visually impaired people and an EMCA and semiotic framework, this paper introduces the concept of perception-related actions and shows how these are observably provided by other agents as resources that constitutes a distributed perceptual field, which enables blind people to perceive and construct actions. The kind of semiotics that will be brought into the EMCA framework is the triadic Peircean (1955) tradition with a reference to the works of Kockelman (2005), Enfield (2017) and Goodwin ; i.e. with a focus on the interactional accountability of the sign production. In this presentation I will particular focus on different forms of semiotic agency. One reason EMCA scholars arguably could to turn to semiotics is in order to get a more vivid terminology and understanding of the agents involved in interactions. EMCA do not recognize ANT{\textquoteright}s heterogenous approach to agents but maintains the ability of accountability. Not in any juridical sense, but in the ethnomethodological understanding of member{\textquoteright}s procedures for making settings accountable and in some way to hold agents responsible. To make actions accountable involves also producing them in ways that make them recognizable for what they are (Koschmann, 2012). Other agents than human beings may produce accountable actions as we clearly dismiss cognition as relevant. In this presentation I will show how distributed perception is achieved in and through actions and assistance from a human agent, a non-human (dog) agent and a technological AI agent. Although a dog and an AI hardly can be said to have “commonsense knowledge” (Garfinkel & Sacks, 1986, p. 178) as members of a society, they can surely act in ways “that are sensible in that society and in the situations in which they find themselves” (Have, 2002, p. 6).",
author = "Due, {Brian Lystgaard}",
year = "2021",
language = "English",
pages = "25--26",
note = "null ; Conference date: 23-02-2021 Through 24-02-2021",
url = "https://www.conferencemanager.dk/resemina/home",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Semiotics of distributed perception: Whose agency?

AU - Due, Brian Lystgaard

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This paper introduces a framework based on EMCA and semiotics related to practices concerned with perception. This is subsumed under the title: semiotics of distributed perception. It will be argued in this presentation, that perception is not just a private, cognitive experience based on one’s own motor skills and interpretation of sensory input, but achieved in and through practical communicative actions in co-operation with other agents. Based on years of video ethnographic research conducted among visually impaired people and an EMCA and semiotic framework, this paper introduces the concept of perception-related actions and shows how these are observably provided by other agents as resources that constitutes a distributed perceptual field, which enables blind people to perceive and construct actions. The kind of semiotics that will be brought into the EMCA framework is the triadic Peircean (1955) tradition with a reference to the works of Kockelman (2005), Enfield (2017) and Goodwin ; i.e. with a focus on the interactional accountability of the sign production. In this presentation I will particular focus on different forms of semiotic agency. One reason EMCA scholars arguably could to turn to semiotics is in order to get a more vivid terminology and understanding of the agents involved in interactions. EMCA do not recognize ANT’s heterogenous approach to agents but maintains the ability of accountability. Not in any juridical sense, but in the ethnomethodological understanding of member’s procedures for making settings accountable and in some way to hold agents responsible. To make actions accountable involves also producing them in ways that make them recognizable for what they are (Koschmann, 2012). Other agents than human beings may produce accountable actions as we clearly dismiss cognition as relevant. In this presentation I will show how distributed perception is achieved in and through actions and assistance from a human agent, a non-human (dog) agent and a technological AI agent. Although a dog and an AI hardly can be said to have “commonsense knowledge” (Garfinkel & Sacks, 1986, p. 178) as members of a society, they can surely act in ways “that are sensible in that society and in the situations in which they find themselves” (Have, 2002, p. 6).

AB - This paper introduces a framework based on EMCA and semiotics related to practices concerned with perception. This is subsumed under the title: semiotics of distributed perception. It will be argued in this presentation, that perception is not just a private, cognitive experience based on one’s own motor skills and interpretation of sensory input, but achieved in and through practical communicative actions in co-operation with other agents. Based on years of video ethnographic research conducted among visually impaired people and an EMCA and semiotic framework, this paper introduces the concept of perception-related actions and shows how these are observably provided by other agents as resources that constitutes a distributed perceptual field, which enables blind people to perceive and construct actions. The kind of semiotics that will be brought into the EMCA framework is the triadic Peircean (1955) tradition with a reference to the works of Kockelman (2005), Enfield (2017) and Goodwin ; i.e. with a focus on the interactional accountability of the sign production. In this presentation I will particular focus on different forms of semiotic agency. One reason EMCA scholars arguably could to turn to semiotics is in order to get a more vivid terminology and understanding of the agents involved in interactions. EMCA do not recognize ANT’s heterogenous approach to agents but maintains the ability of accountability. Not in any juridical sense, but in the ethnomethodological understanding of member’s procedures for making settings accountable and in some way to hold agents responsible. To make actions accountable involves also producing them in ways that make them recognizable for what they are (Koschmann, 2012). Other agents than human beings may produce accountable actions as we clearly dismiss cognition as relevant. In this presentation I will show how distributed perception is achieved in and through actions and assistance from a human agent, a non-human (dog) agent and a technological AI agent. Although a dog and an AI hardly can be said to have “commonsense knowledge” (Garfinkel & Sacks, 1986, p. 178) as members of a society, they can surely act in ways “that are sensible in that society and in the situations in which they find themselves” (Have, 2002, p. 6).

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

SP - 25

EP - 26

Y2 - 23 February 2021 through 24 February 2021

ER -

ID: 257300856