Published February 7, 2026 | Version v1
Preprint Open

Motion Capture After Anthropocentrism: Toward Other-Than-Human Choreographic Practices

  • 1. ROR icon Malta College of Arts, Science and Technology
  • 2. ROR icon Kobe University
  • 3. ROR icon Technische Universität Braunschweig

Description

Motion capture (MoCap) technology has received significant attention as a tool for quantitative movement analysis. Rapid advances in machine learning have made MoCap more accessible and easier to use. However, critical reflection on MoCap’s pragmatic paradigm—how it is used in dance creation, education, and analytics—has not progressed. From a dance research perspective, this paper argues that MoCap implicitly presupposes a choreographic vocabulary centered on the human body. Furthermore, from a computational complexity perspective, it notes that living organisms do not perceive or regulate their bodies through recognition processes comparable to those employed by MoCap technologies. In response, the authors propose reframing MoCap as a navigational medium that facilitates interactions among bodies, environments, and other-than-human beings.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
ETD - Environmental Turn of Dance: Convergence of Therapeutic Practice, Art Creation with AI and Community Practice 101180719