Satinder Gill, researcher, Cambridge
Satinder Gill is a Visiting Scholar with the Computer Laboratory, and member of
the Centre for Music and Science, University of Cambridge. She is also a
collaborator with the Topological Media Lab at Concordia University, Canada.
Satinder is Associate Editor of the International Journal, AI & Society:
Knowledge, Culture and Communication (Springer), and is Editor of the book,
‘Cognition, Communication, and Interaction: Transdisciplinary Perspectives on
Interactive Technology, published in 2007 (Springer).
Satinder has a BA (Hons) Degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics,
University of Keele, UK, and received her PhD on ‘Dialogue and Tacit Knowledge
for Knowledge Transfer’ in 1995 with the University of Cambridge, UK. Her
research positions include: Visiting Researcher with the
Swedish Centre for Working Life, Stockholm; Visiting Research fellow with the
Institute of Technology and Education, Bremen University; Visiting Researcher
IMES, Department of Sociology, University of Uribino. Satinder has been a
Research Scientist with NTT’s Communication Science Laboratories
(CSL) and ATR (Kyoto) in Japan (1997-1999), and held a Joint position with
CKIR, Finland (Centre for Knowledge and Innovation Research) and CSLI (Centre
for the Study of Language and Information) Stanford University (2000-2003). She
was a Senior Research Fellow at Middlesex University,
London, UK (2004-2009) where she represented the university in the EU Funded
Research Coordination Action: ETHICBOTS, ‘Emerging Technoethics of Human
Interaction with Communication, Bionic and Robotic Systems’.
Satinder’s Research is concerned with the Human-System Interface and her recent
work with musicians and performance arts is to explore the relation between the
analog and the digital. Her work has investigated the processes of
transformation in tacit knowing in communication. Following the PhD at
Cambridge (1995) on the dynamics and structures of dialogue that shape tacit
knowing, she extended this analysis in a study of aesthetic production in
landscape architectural practices. The research was further developed in Japan,
where she developed the theory of Body Moves, a pragmatics theory of rhythmic
body prosody as collective acts across persons. Susequent research at Stanford
tested the theory in a series of experiments that suggested that collective
acts have a different quality of timing patterns to the background of speech
and gesture from which they emerge. Her work is develop the the relations between rhythmic synchrony,
intersubjectivity, and communication as performance.
Satinder Gill is a Visiting Scholar with the Computer Laboratory, and member of the Centre for Music and Science, University of Cambridge. She is also a collaborator with the Topological Media Lab at Concordia University, Canada.
Satinder is Associate Editor of the International Journal, AI & Society: Knowledge, Culture and Communication (Springer), and is Editor of the book, ’Cognition, Communication, and Interaction: Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Interactive Technology, published in 2007 (Springer).
Satinder has a BA (Hons) Degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics, University of Keele, UK, and received her PhD on ‘Dialogue and Tacit Knowledge for Knowledge Transfer’ in 1995 with the University of Cambridge, UK. Her research positions include: Visiting Researcher with the Swedish Centre for Working Life, Stockholm; Visiting Research fellow with the Institute of Technology and Education, Bremen University; Visiting Researcher IMES, Department of Sociology, University of Uribino. Satinder has been a Research Scientist with NTT’s Communication Science Laboratories (CSL) and ATR (Kyoto) in Japan (1997-1999), and held a Joint position with CKIR, Finland (Centre for Knowledge and Innovation Research) and CSLI (Centre for the Study of Language and Information) Stanford University (2000-2003). She was a Senior Research Fellow at Middlesex University, London, UK (2004-2009) where she represented the university in the EU Funded Research Coordination Action: ETHICBOTS, ‘Emerging Technoethics of Human Interaction with Communication, Bionic and Robotic Systems’. Satinder’s Research is concerned with the Human-System Interface and her recent work with musicians and performance arts is to explore the relation between the analog and the digital. Her work has investigated the processes of transformation in tacit knowing in communication. Following the PhD at Cambridge (1995) on the dynamics and structures of dialogue that shape tacit knowing, she extended this analysis in a study of aesthetic production in landscape architectural practices. The research was further developed in Japan, where she developed the theory of Body Moves, a pragmatics theory of rhythmic body prosody as collective acts across persons. Susequent research at Stanford tested the theory in a series of experiments that suggested that collective acts have a different quality of timing patterns to the background of speech and gesture from which they emerge. Her work is develop the the relations between rhythmic synchrony, intersubjectivity, and communication as performance.
Satinder Gill
Satinder Gill, researcher, Cambridge
Satinder Gill is a Visiting Scholar with the Computer Laboratory, and member of the Centre for Music and Science, University of Cambridge. She is also a collaborator with the Topological Media Lab at Concordia University, Canada.
Satinder is Associate Editor of the International Journal, AI & Society: Knowledge, Culture and Communication (Springer), and is Editor of the book, ’Cognition, Communication, and Interaction: Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Interactive Technology, published in 2007 (Springer).
Satinder has a BA (Hons) Degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics, University of Keele, UK, and received her PhD on ‘Dialogue and Tacit Knowledge for Knowledge Transfer’ in 1995 with the University of Cambridge, UK. Her research positions include: Visiting Researcher with the Swedish Centre for Working Life, Stockholm; Visiting Research fellow with the Institute of Technology and Education, Bremen University; Visiting Researcher IMES, Department of Sociology, University of Uribino. Satinder has been a Research Scientist with NTT’s Communication Science Laboratories (CSL) and ATR (Kyoto) in Japan (1997-1999), and held a Joint position with CKIR, Finland (Centre for Knowledge and Innovation Research) and CSLI (Centre for the Study of Language and Information) Stanford University (2000-2003). She was a Senior Research Fellow at Middlesex University, London, UK (2004-2009) where she represented the university in the EU Funded Research Coordination Action: ETHICBOTS, ‘Emerging Technoethics of Human Interaction with Communication, Bionic and Robotic Systems’. Satinder’s Research is concerned with the Human-System Interface and her recent work with musicians and performance arts is to explore the relation between the analog and the digital. Her work has investigated the processes of transformation in tacit knowing in communication. Following the PhD at Cambridge (1995) on the dynamics and structures of dialogue that shape tacit knowing, she extended this analysis in a study of aesthetic production in landscape architectural practices. The research was further developed in Japan, where she developed the theory of Body Moves, a pragmatics theory of rhythmic body prosody as collective acts across persons. Susequent research at Stanford tested the theory in a series of experiments that suggested that collective acts have a different quality of timing patterns to the background of speech and gesture from which they emerge. Her work is develop the the relations between rhythmic synchrony, intersubjectivity, and communication as performance.