55 Falls / Ambient Assisted Living
| Date: | 2025 |
| Format: | Video installation (2-channel video, 4-channel audio) |
| Credit: | Machine Listening (Sean Dockray, James Parker, Joel Stern) |
| Index: | dataset-critique installation |
View the official documentation for this installation on the Machine Listening website and video documentation of the installation.

Description
A series of simulated accidents are projected onto two large, leaning screens: young people pretending to be old repeatedly enter a room and fall. They pass into the windowless space, hunched and hesitant, clutching walking aids like props in an unconvincing theatre, before improvising their own descent to the floor where they lie motionless for precisely measured intervals. What is happening here? What is this place? 55 Falls / Ambient Assisted Living replays sequences from a Belgian healthcare technology dataset published in 2016—“High quality fall simulation data”—videos in which young researchers perform their imagination of elderly fragility in a fabricated care home to stage falls for training machine learning algorithms. The videos, originally silent, serve as a score for musicians Lizzy Welsh, Jessica Aszodi, and Joel Stern to soundtrack a film that was never intended for human eyes.
Interwoven with these research performances are generative AI recreations of the this staged environment, where artificial intelligence attempts to depict the same scenarios that the human performers enacted. Here, technology falters differently: the AI-generated bodies hesitate, the very act of falling becomes uncertain, unconsummated, abstract. Two forms of failure converge—the human failure to authentically embody frailty, and the machine's failure to convincingly render that embodiment. As violin, voice, and synthesiser track and sonify these doubled inadequacies, the work reflects on the distance between care as human relationship and care as technological solution calling forth its own quiet requiem. In this space between what cannot be performed and what cannot be computed, capital is busy rearranging social bonds, generational touch, and mortality itself.
Researched, written and produced: Sean Dockray, James Parker, Joel Stern
Dataset: “High quality fall simulation data” created by Advanced Integrated Sensing lab at the Faculty of Engineering Technology of KU Leuven
Installation


Exhibited
- The Mourning After, RMIT Design Hub, Melbourne, 2025