Research
History
During the late 20th century, increasing scientific interest emerged around the relationship between consciousness, sensory stimulation, hemispheric specialization, and autonomic nervous system regulation. Researchers working in biofeedback, psychophysiology, and human potential studies began investigating whether controlled sensory environments could measurably influence attention, physiological state, and patterns of neural activation.
It was within this intellectual climate that the device then known as the Kinoscope entered the research environment at Nova University.
Originally developed as an experimental kinetic visual system, the Kinoscope combined slow-moving illuminated forms, repetitive visual activation, and prolonged temporal continuity into a single immersive perceptual environment. Unlike conventional visual media designed to maximize stimulation and rapid attentional shifts, the Kinoscope emphasized gradual change, sustained focus, and extended visual engagement.
Researchers associated with the university’s biofeedback investigations became interested in the possibility that such controlled repetitive visual activation might correlate with measurable psychophysiological responses. Particular attention was directed toward questions involving hemispheric laterality and autonomic nervous system activity — subjects that were receiving growing scientific attention during that period.
The resulting study, titled Hemispheric and Autonomic Laterality Effects of Unilateral Repetitive Activation, explored these relationships within an experimental framework informed by contemporary biofeedback methodology.
The work was conducted under the supervision of Joe Kamiya, internationally recognized as one of the pioneering figures in modern biofeedback research. Kamiya’s earlier investigations into alpha-wave awareness and self-regulation had helped establish biofeedback as a legitimate field of scientific inquiry, particularly in relation to consciousness studies and psychophysiological monitoring.
Within this research context, the Kinoscope was not approached merely as an aesthetic object or light sculpture. Rather, it functioned as a controlled perceptual apparatus capable of generating repetitive luminous stimulation over extended durations. Investigators examined how prolonged interaction with the system related to autonomic and hemispheric response patterns, contributing to broader questions concerning sensory entrainment, attentional modulation, and physiological regulation.
The study emerged during a period when interdisciplinary boundaries between art, psychology, neuroscience, and cybernetic systems research were unusually fluid. Experimental visual systems, contemplative environments, and perceptual technologies were increasingly being explored not only within artistic circles, but also within research communities interested in human cognition and self-regulation.
Although the scientific language and methodologies of that era differed from contemporary neuroscience, many of the underlying questions remain relevant today. Modern research continues to investigate relationships between repetitive sensory stimulation, attentional dynamics, autonomic regulation, and neuroaesthetic response.
Over time, the Kinoscope evolved into what is now known as the Flow Machine. While the name and physical refinements changed, the central inquiry remained remarkably consistent: how slow-moving luminous environments influence sustained perception, physiological state, and the structure of human attention.
Today, the Nova University work represents an important historical chapter in the continuing evolution of the Flow Machine — documenting an early and unusual intersection of kinetic art, psychophysiology, biofeedback research, and contemplative visual systems.