Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Whooping It Up in Adbusters Magazine

I'm thrilled to announce that my short story "Whooping it Up in the Uncanny Valley" has been published in the current, "Apocalypse Soon" issue of Adbusters Magazine.

The inspiration for this piece came a couple years ago from a New Yorker article about robotics. In the field, there's a term called "the uncanny valley." Briefly explained: when a person encounters an artificial being, they are more likely to empathize with it if it has distinctly human characteristics. However, if the artificial being is too human, revulsion takes the place of empathy. The Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori termed this sudden dip in empathy the "uncanny valley." (This is one of my favorite articles on the phenomenon.)

As I read the article, I started to wonder what it would be like if the uncanny valley was an actual place. Who would live there? And what would it take to finally push them to the point of revulsion? When I started to create this fictional place, I found it was not all that different from the gated, suburban communities many live in now. My nameless protagonist wakes up one morning to find himself disgusted with his life. The story is his attempt to cut through the unreality of his life and finally live and feel like a real human being again.

The piece is on newsstands now. I believe it will be online soon.

4 Comments:

Marise said...

I haven't yet experienced the "uncanny valley" of revulsion, but I certainly have felt a great deal of empathy for robotic entities.

Case in point: when they kicked the little doggy-robot in this video, I got sooo sad!

9/25/2006 12:31 PM  
Cruise said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

10/17/2006 12:49 PM  
Chuck said...

There is more to Mr. Mori's statements that should be explained / paraphrased ... JLS sez... "when a person encounters an artificial being, they are more likely to empathize with it if it has distinctly human characteristics. However, if the artificial being is too human, revulsion takes the place of empathy" ... what might or might not be obvious is that the artificial being sparks a momentary or longer feeling of human interaction which, I'm guessing, quickly falls into the catagory of trickery. I think it has more to do with the feeling of being fooled than anything else... which in what he is describing... happens in mere moments. Then again... moments can be eons.

12/11/2006 9:34 PM  
JLS said...

Chuck: That's such a great point. Part of the revulsion is in the deception, however temporary.

12/12/2006 10:42 AM  

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