Media Experiences

This area of EIS work focuses on design research toward new genres of audience experience.

We believe new technologies, tools, and design approaches for creating computational media are often best understood and evaluated by using them to create novel works of media. This helps establish whether something new has truly been enabled — and shows at least one example of the audience experiences that are possible. It also reveals issues that tend to remain invisible with projects that only reach the technology or prototype phase. Finally, it also makes it possible to expand the public’s understanding of how computational media can work and what it can be about.

The resulting projects take a variety of forms, from pure software to hybrids involving physical materials and live performance. We share this work in a range of ways, from festival and museum showings to public releases.

Someone playing Bad News

Bad News is a computationally mediated installation and performance piece set in a procedurally generated small American town. Someone in the town has just died, and the player — a mortician’s assistant — has been tasked with tracking down and notifying the deceased’s next of kin. In order to do this, the player must interact with the town’s simulated inhabitants — portrayed by a professional actor — in a series of one-on-one conversations. The actor, in turn, is supported by a behind-the-scenes “wizard”, who listens in remotely to manage the unfolding experience via live coding and discreet communication with the actor. Bad News has been mounted internationally, at venues including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Slamdance Film Festival, and IndieCade, where it won the 2016 Audience Choice award.

Ice-Bound Concordance screenshot

The Ice-Bound Concordance is an award-winning interactive narrative game where the story is constructed from fluidly recombined building blocks, and where themes and endings are discovered with the help of a physical art book, The Ice-Bound Compendium. The game’s dynamic narrative system avoids branching paths, instead assembling and reconfiguring story fragments based on player exploration of different events and narrative themes, and the player's developing relationship with an AI author character. The Concordance also recognizes pages shown to it by the player from the printed book, and changes and animates the pages using augmented reality. The Ice-Bound Concordance won the award for Best Story and World Design at IndieCade 2014 and was a finalist for the Excellence in Narrative award at the Independent Games Festival 2015.

GameSpace screenshot

GameSpace is a three-dimensional visualization of 16,000 games on Wikipedia. The visualization uses natural language processing (NLP) machine learning algorithms to position games based on their Wikipedia article text. This is the same process (latent semantic analysis) that was used to derive the GameNet, GameSage, and GameGlobs models, with an additional step that uses t-stochastic neighborhood embedding (TSNE) to provide each game with a three dimensional coordinate in a "galaxy" of games.

GameSpace can be interacted with at gamespace.io.

Prom Week screenshot

Prom Week is a social simulation game driven by a novel artificial intelligence engine, with the goal of making social interactions truly playable. Just as games like Angry Birds support emergent solutions to physical challenges, Prom Week’s underlying simulation of social considerations (containing over 5,000 rules of social norms and behaviors) allow for emergent solutions to social challenges. And unlike games like The Sims which use abstractions such as nonsense words or icons to represent language, Prom Week features actual English dialogue, and characters with detailed histories, likes, dislikes, permanent traits, and temporary statuses — all of which can be leveraged by the player to produce just the right prom night story. Prom Week was a finalist at the 2012 Independent Games Festival and IndieCade Festival, won the Intelligent Virtual Agents 2012 GALA demo and video festival and the Best AI in an Independent Game from AI Game Dev, and was covered in venues such as New Scientist and Rock Paper Shotgun.

Prom Week can be played on Facebook.

Facade screenshot

Façade is an AI-driven experimental game, allowing players to experience the first fully-realized interactive drama. Integrating an interdisciplinary set of artistic practices and artificial intelligence technologies, it includes a novel architecture for supporting emotional, interactive character behavior and drama-managed plot. Within this architecture resides a dramatically interesting, real-time 3D virtual world inhabited by computer-controlled characters, in which the player experiences a story from a first-person perspective. Façade has been downloaded more than five million times, widely exhibited, covered in publications such as The New York Times and The Atlantic Monthly, and featured in YouTube videos viewed more than 100 million times.