Julia Scott-Stevenson

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Julia Scott-Stevenson

Dr Julia Scott-Stevenson is a researcher, producer and curator of interactive and immersive media. Her current UTS Chancellor’s Fellowship project uses practice-led research to explore how immersive media (virtual, augmented and mixed reality) might address the climate crisis. Julia produced *Privy To*, an XR project exploring privacy rights through using an artist’s brainwaves to compose music, which was one of 14 projects globally to be showcased at CPH:DOX's Inter:Active Exhibition in 2021 and was also presented at Electric Dreams Festival. Julia was previously a research fellow in interactive factual media at UWE Bristol, UK, and in 2019 she was also an immersion fellow on the UK’s South West Creative Technology Network, where she developed a manifesto for virtual futures. Julia has given talks internationally and mentored in XR/VR/AR for Sheffield Doc/Fest, Dok Leipzig, BBC’s New Creatives and EastDoc (Prague). She holds a PhD in interactive documentary and social impact, and has taught at institutions in Australia and the UK.

Related Sessions

The Myth of the Single User

FRI, OCT 20, 3:30 PM
Conference
There are myriad ways of being in the world, yet many approaches to experience- and technology-design invoke ‘the user’; a standardised, non-specific person with a fixed perspective. But what biases might be hidden within our assumptions about this mythical user? And how might we instead create experiences and tools that reflect and support diverse perspectives and ways of being? This panel will examine how extended reality (XR) and interactive media technologies might offer possible solutions, through embracing neurodivergence, disability, and a range of bodily expressions across users. Dr Scott Brown will discuss his current research connecting neurodiversity and spatial sound. His project explores how adaptive multi-channel audio could allow neurodivergent people to engage with cultural experiences in public settings. Dr Julia Scott-Stevenson will explore how features of XR technologies can exclude users, and will examine the notion of glitch in computational media in parallel with concepts of diversity in human bodies. Michela Ledwidge will discuss the challenges of running a studio in an increasingly conservative technology landscape. From working around stereotyped off-the-shelf digital human tools, to building with LLM models that are trained on biased data, finding solutions that push back on the status quo is a complex task.
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