LEXICON - POST HUMAN / MACHINE COMMUNICATION STUDY
Lexicon is a research-driven interactive system that explores a reduced grammar for human–machine communication.
The work compresses spoken language into a limited set of structural dimensions: mood, intent, tense, and focus, and translates these into a constrained visual system. Rather than expanding language through prediction or generation, the system reduces communication into finite symbolic states.
This approach treats language as something to be structured and bounded rather than extended. By limiting expression, the system investigates whether meaningful exchange with machines can emerge through constraint instead of abundance.
Lexicon operates as an ongoing research experiment. It explores how localized inference, reduced computational models, and non-extractive AI architectures can produce alternative forms of interaction. It also studies how human speech adapts when forced into a simplified and structured communicative framework.
The visual output reflects the internal state of the system as it processes and stabilises input across its defined dimensions, forming a symbolic grammar that evolves over time.
Rather than proposing a universal language, Lexicon examines the conditions under which a shared language might emerge, one defined by limitation, structure, and continuous transformation.