Design in the folding calculation of origamis in interactive installation art
Abstract
With the rapid development of digital technology, new media installation artists explore the possibilities of "human-computer interaction" in installation art by computer using sensing technology, communication technology, and other new artificial intelligence technologies. Modern origami shapes flat surfaces into an orderly three-dimensional structures through the design of creases, allowing the works to display both rigidity and flexibility of mechanical properties. By analyzing the mechanical properties and mathematical laws contained in the rules of modern origami, we have built a visual interface model using Touch Designer software. Based on the computational model, we designed an intelligent interactive origami installation with “autonomous behavior” that can be encoded or decoded and automatically read and executed by the acoustic collision rebound. Driven by artificially empowered, the "folding" of paper extends into visible, interactive, and perceptible "movement behavior The inter-media integration attempts to combine material, structure and algorithm, hopefully providing a new perspective for the innovation of new media dynamic installation art.
Keywords: New media installation art, Folded structure, Computable media, Intelligent interaction
DOI: 10.54941/ahfe1002906
Cite this paper
More from this volume
- Non-visual effects of CCT on drivers, evidence from EEG
- Drowsiness Prevention System in Automatic Driving -- Effects of Light Position on Comfortable and Unconscious Wakefulness During Driving
- When do People Expect Effortless In-Car Interactions?
- Involving users in Automotive HMI design: Design evaluation of an interactive simulation based on participatory design
- Investigating Effects of Assistance Systems For Visually Impaired Drivers at Preventing Traffic Accidents
- Exploring remote operation of heavy vehicles – findings from a simulator study
- Interaction between humans and autonomous systems: Human facing explanatory interface for an urban autonomous passenger ferry
- Comparing Electrostatic and Vibrotactile Feedback for In-Car Touchscreen Interaction using common User Interface Controls
- A design approach of proactive HMI based on smart interaction
- Micro-refresh to Restore Intellectual Concentration Decline during Office Work: An Attempt at Quantitative Effect Evaluation
- An Improved Body Operations Mitigating VR Sickness through Stepping Gaming Mat
- Effects of listening to sutra chanting during breaks in on-demand lecture attendance


AHFE Open Access