Greg Elliott is a 2nd year ACE student in the Informatics & Computer Science department. He has a B.S. in Cognitive Science & Computation from UCSD. Interested in shaping the way design both dictates and allows for more effective interaction, his current focus is on creating systems that are both functional and emotionally fulfilling. Lately, he has branched into the design of ubiquitous devices. A musician and philosopher at heart, he enjoys returning to his roots by framing and exploring them in a software/hardware medium.
His past work includes:
Greg is still employed by and closely tied with the Interactive Cognition Lab @ UCSD.
Harmony is a second year ACE student in the ICS department of UCI. She has a B.E. in Electronic Information Engineering at Tianjin University in China. She is also a musician who plays the piano, cello and erhu. Her main research interests include human-computer interaction, signal processing, algorithmic composition and electronic music devices.
Pearl Ho is a second year ACE student in the engineering degree path. She graduated from the University of Texas at Austin achieving a BS in electrical engineering. Her interests are in biomedical devices, MEMS, wireless devices, women’s studies, and science studies. Her artworks will challenge the engineering industry to expand research and development to uncultivated utilities. Pearl’s past research has been in biomedical instrumentation. She is always in search of new transdisciplinary collaborations.
Metal Hearts, Botox. numbering. Eternal youth, skin, mines, Prozac, mapping. Biological manipulation, sociology, antibiotics, media. Sequencing, manipulation and the beautification of disease.
Mapping those pregnant moments essential to contemporary human life, my luscious segments of synthetic biomorphic imagery document the untenable, yet emotive experiences evident in science, society, art and the self today
Her multimedia installations have been exhibited in major museums, and she has been an artist in residence at The Contemporary Arts Center in Atlanta and the Helene Wurlitzer Foundation in Taos.