Dear colleagues and STS fellows,
We would like to draw your attention to the following call for
abstracts of the journal
New Media & Society
for a special issue on “
Digital Twinning”. We look forward
to receiving your paper proposals! Please feel free to forward the
CfA to potentially interested colleagues.
thanks & best greetings,
Christoph
___
Call for Abstracts: New Media & Society,
Special Issue “Digital Twinning”
Edited by Christoph Borbach, Wendy Chun, and Tristan Thielmann
Datafication in the analogue era followed a different logic than
do today’s media processes, with all their entanglements and
interdependencies with and within the ‘real’ world. Human bodies,
system processes, and their data traces and virtual models are
deeply intertwined in current postdigital—or rather,
more-than-human (Lupton 2019)—media cultures. It is surely not a
new idea that data and the technologies of its collection,
storage, circulation, and evaluation are shaping how societies and
individuals see themselves. But it is a novelty that processes of
datafication within the context of ‘digital twinning’ and their
future predictions and simulations of behavior—mostly systems
behavior but also human purchasing and movement behaviors, with
their political implications—are fundamentally changing the
methods of production planning, processes, and products.
Technologies of digital twinning ask once more how data practices
affect and mold decision-making within institutions (Vertesi
2020).
‘Digital twins’ are currently the most important drivers of the
fourth industrial revolution. These ever-more-complex technical
products and processes are now developed and tested in the virtual
sphere as software models before they emerge in the ‘real’ world.
The paradigm of digital media technologies is therefore subject to
fundamental change through the prevalence of digital twins in
industry and research. The digital is no longer a real-time
virtual representation of a real-world physical object: it is
exactly the opposite and concurrently much more than that,
allowing new forms of “premediation” (Grusin 2010), in the
analysis of future performances of objects without the physical
presence of the objects. Digital twinning therefore promises not
only the potential of making futures predictable through
recognition and correlation of digital and analog, virtual and
physical (Chun 2021), but the ability to do so without physical
counterparts. Digital twinning is no longer restricted to single
entities—like objects being studied—but allows for modeling
complex chains of co-operations. What is most striking from a
media theory perspective is that technical objects, models,
services, operations, or even entire cities, metro systems, or
logistical architectures can be objects of digital twinning.
Digital twins make clear that the real world is just one possible
realization of the primarily virtual world. At the same time,
digital twins and other haunting ‘data doppelgangers’ allow
overarching data exchange and cooperation. They are more than pure
data, proving once more that so-called “raw data” does not exist
(Bowker 2005; Gitelman 2013). Digital twins consist of technical
and social models of acting objects, and integrate various
embedded sensors related to vital areas of functionality that make
things and processes ‘sense-able’ (Gabrys 2019). Digital twins can
therefore also include simulations and services, asking anew if
there is anything worldly which may must remain “uncomputable”
(Galloway 2021).
Taking digital twinning as an analytic lens, the special issue
will also try to understand aesthetics, politics, genders, and
economies of ‘data doubles.’ These new symptoms of postdigital
media and data cultures differ from previous motifs of doubles,
e.g. literary doppelgangers as in the work of E. T. A. Hoffmann,
among others. Selfies are emblematic of digital data cultures and
their visual regime (Eckel et al. 2018), as are avatar images in
avatar-based gaming (Klevjer 2022), since they are not mere
pictorial representations but digital images of self-perception
and self-modeling. They stand as digital doubles exemplary for the
self in extended realities (XR), self-embodiment in digital
spheres, and the continuum between offline and online (Coleman
2011). Similar to digital twins, digital ‘doubles’ even without a
physical ‘original’ can unfold influence, literally, as virtual
influencers or actors such as Hatsune Miku demonstrates.
Media practices of doubling and storing the self might have
predigital histories (Humphreys 2018). But only digital tracking
applications can be regarded as real-time feedback loops that
influence human behavior. This can be seen positively since it
transforms the way humans self-optimize, e.g. their athletic
behavior, as quantified self-movement shows. But it can also be
critically reflected from a political standpoint, since it evokes
a shift from individuals to ‘dividuals’ and an interpretation of
human beings as conglomerates of sensor technology, flesh, and
data doubles within surveillant assemblages (Haggerty and Richard
2000).
To account for this complex technological situation and its social
impacts, the special issue “Digital Twinning” will bring together
researchers from different fields: engineering and social science,
informatics and media studies. The aim is to understand concepts
and practices but also politics and aesthetics of data doubling
and digital twinning that are not restricted to purposes of system
and production monitoring, maintenance, and simulation—that is,
processes of digital engineering. We will also expand the scope,
to include real-time interrelations of digital data acquisition
and simulation, on the one hand, and the physical performance of
humans, things, and systems, on the other.
We are seeking
abstracts (500 words) for submissions until
December 31, 2023 (to be sent to
christop...@uni-siegen.de,
subject: “NM&S Special Issue: Digital Twinning”), that
might address—but are not limited to—one or more of the following
topics:
- how is data agential (in digital twinning)?
- interrelations and interdependencies between physical and
digital twins and doubles
- politics, (data) economies, and technologies of digital
twinning and doubling
- boundaries in the modeling of twins
- (de)central places of twinning: where is it to be done, and
by whom?
- twinning as labor: precarious work, and/or precarious for
workers?
- histories of twinning: from science fiction, to NASA, to the
public?
- future digital practices of twinning
- imaginaries and aesthetics of twinning
- gendering and aesthetics of avatars
- challenges and difficulties of data governance, data rights,
and data sustainability
- sensor ecologies and their impact on digital twinning
- media and social theories of digital twinning
- digital methods, ethnographic, and ethnomethodological
approaches for further research on digital twinning
- applications for digital twins in the industrial and
consumer metaverse