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Virtual worlds in creation

New minor courses in virtual reality introduce a creative angle on the design processes and implementation of virtually created worlds.
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'Points in Time', (by Bingdie Huang, Hannu Ikola, Amedeo Martines & Anshul Sood), a project created during the course Designing and Creating Virtual Worlds (UWAS-C0056).

This autumn marked the beginning of brand-new courses in the minor . The aim of the minor is to provide artistic, design, and technical skills needed for creating synthetic experiences in the form of worlds that can be used for various purposes including art installations, film, and, game design. 

In recent years, several technical breakthroughs have facilitated a new wave in virtual worlds. For the first time, VR/AR devices have entered the general consumer market, and a wide variety of VR applications are being developed. While commercial interests actively drive much of the current developments, this medium also provides new and exciting opportunities for art and design. As such, VR/AR’s impact is widespread and can be experienced as; virtual workplaces, virtual tourism, medical applications, as well as new forms of storytelling and documentation. Currently there is no extensive course offering dealing with technical and design aspects of virtual reality in AaltoARTS. Thus, the minor in Building virtual worlds is a timely and valuable addition to the curriculum.

virtual worlds
The making-of 'Memory Forest' (by Monica Celeste, Mark Laukkanen, Pei-Chi Tai, Strahinja Jovanovic), a project created during Designing and Creating Virtual Worlds (UWAS-C0056).

The minor is led by professors Lily Diaz-Kommonen and Sebastian J. Schlecht,and consists of four compulsory courses and additional elective courses. CodingVirtual Worlds (DOM-E5162) works as an introduction to coding virtual reality experiences. The students learn the basics of Unity 3D, interaction paradigms, and gain hands-on experience with the Oculus Quest.

During the course Designing and Creating Virtual Worlds (UWAS-C0056) participants learn the basics of designing and implementing a virtual world. The presentations in the course touch on topics related to the process of design, including information architecture, storyboarding, interaction design, coding a VR application in Unity 3D, user studies etc. As opposed to the usual emphasis on technological push, the course is unique in its emphasis on creativity and artistic sensibility as the starting point for virtual reality.

The minor’s additional courses offer a range from sound design to human-computer interaction. Immersive Sound (ELEC-E5690) explores the world of spatial audio and immersive auditory experiences from technical and artistic perspectives, while offering an interdisciplinary introduction to binaural listening, sound design, and interactivity.

immersive sound
'Sonified linguistic map', created during the course Immersive Sound (ELEC-E5690). The map presents various languages and dialects according to the location of the traveler.

A cultural history of virtual reality, which is yet to be written, will need to begin by acknowledging the cultural conditioning of human sensory experience. We cannot ignore our material existence which transcurs in and through our bodies, which are also subject to influences of culture. Though it shares some of its characteristics, such as immersion, in its core virtual reality is not time-based media like cinema. Through the contraints that it places on the human senses, virtual reality is a new medium that affords a high degree of immersion as well as the experience of 'being there'.

virtual worlds
'The Rower' (by Madalina Nastasa, Jenni Tuominen & Suhyie Choi) presents a reality-like experience of rowing a boat and navigating along a river. The project was created during the course Designing and Creating Virtual Worlds (UWAS-C0056).
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