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The term literatronica, also literatronic (Marino, 2006), was coined by Colombian mathematician and author
Juan B Gutierrez ''Juan'' is a given name, the Spanish and Manx versions of ''John''. It is very common in Spain and in other Spanish-speaking communities around the world and in the Philippines, and also (pronounced differently) in the Isle of Man. In Spanish, t ...
(2002) to refer to electronic literature. According to Gutierrez (2006): {{cquote, A word that describes digital narrative, that is, narrative designed for the computer, is ''literatronic''. It comes from the Latin word ''litera'' -letter- and the Greek word which gave birth to the word electricity, ''electron'' -Amber. ''Literatronic'' means letter that requires electricity, or by extension, letter that requires a computer. ''Literatronic'' works could not be reproduced on paper except, perhaps, as a reading path at a given moment. The literary hypertext authoring system known as Literatronica was developed by
Juan B Gutierrez ''Juan'' is a given name, the Spanish and Manx versions of ''John''. It is very common in Spain and in other Spanish-speaking communities around the world and in the Philippines, and also (pronounced differently) in the Isle of Man. In Spanish, t ...
. Instead of relying solely on static hypertext links (for the system allows these as well), it uses an AI engine to recommend the best next pages based on what readers have already read. Literatronica radically revises the 1990s notions of literary hypertext as Modernist collage to the "original" notions of
Arpanet The Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was the first wide-area packet-switched network with distributed control and one of the first networks to implement the TCP/IP protocol suite. Both technologies became the technical foun ...
as document sharing, where speed of access was put before what Espen Aarseth calls the
aporia In philosophy, an aporia ( grc, ᾰ̓πορῐ́ᾱ, aporíā, literally: "lacking passage", also: "impasse", "difficulty in passage", "puzzlement") is a conundrum or state of puzzlement. In rhetoric, it is a declaration of doubt, made for r ...
of links. In short, he asks, is nonlinearity and disruption inherent to the medium? The system addresses several of the major classic problems found with hypertext, namely, the problems of: # Readers knowing how much of a text has been read. # Readers encountering repeated pages without artistic effect. # Readers getting lost and not finding their way through the text. # Writers struggling to maintain large systems of static links.


How it works

1. Authors input their pages into the web interface. 2. Authors decide which pages should be linked with each other 3. Authors assign a numeric "distance" between connected pages. A passage which follows easily, or without much interpretive work might be a 5 while a passage that is distantly related might be a 25.


What the system does

Out of these ''distances, '' the system creates a map. To help the reader traverse the map, the system runs a
shortest path In graph theory, the shortest path problem is the problem of finding a path between two vertices (or nodes) in a graph such that the sum of the weights of its constituent edges is minimized. The problem of finding the shortest path between t ...
algorithm to suggest paths. Because the system is dynamic, it can change paths according to the pages the reader has already encountered.


How the reader encounters it

The reader is presented with an opening page. At the bottom of the screen are titles and short teasers for ''n'' possible subsequent pages, being ''n'' a number decided by the author for each page. Percentages beside the titles of these pages indicate "narrative continuity", as the higher percentages indicate greater linkage. When there is only one subsequent page, the system merely offers a "next" button. Readers can choose any of the links; however, once a page has been read it is removed from the bullpen of choices. If readers want to go back, they can access the "map", and reset pages to "unread". This feature allows the system to show its true dynamic powers, as a system can rearrange sequence in a way that static links cannot.


The author’s experience

The system can be used by each author in any number of ways. For example, an author can assign two pages the same distance, leaving it up to the reader to choose. Or the author can rate as highly continuous two pages that have nothing to do with each other, if they want their work to present a more difficult path. Writers might also offer their links in the hopes that readers will take the path less chosen. This system introduces a new semiotic element: the relative distance between pages. Rather than thinking in hypertext terms, which elements should be linked, the author considers levels of kinship, affinity, connection. The system reports reader activity so that authors can get a sense of what paths people are taking. In response, authors can change the distances. Gradually the readers will cut through the grass, wear it down to just dirt, and authors can lay the concrete on top in response — assuming the author has an interest in what the readers like to do.


See also

* Electronic literature * Reading path


References

* Marino, Mark.
Literatronica: The next generation of hypertext authoring
'. WRT: Writer Response Theory. (accessed October 10, 2006). * Gutierrez, Juan B. ''The influence of artificial intelligence in hyperfiction: Towards the digital author''. Proceedings of Literatures: From Text to Hypertext, 1st International Conference on Hypertext of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Madrid, Spain. * Gutierrez, Juan B.

(Literatronic: About how and why create fiction for digital media.)'' in Proceedings of the 1er Congreso del Observatorio para la Cibersociedad (1st Congress of the Observatory for the Cibersociety.) Barcelona, Spain. In
Spanish Spanish might refer to: * Items from or related to Spain: ** Spaniards are a nation and ethnic group indigenous to Spain **Spanish language, spoken in Spain and many Latin American countries **Spanish cuisine Other places * Spanish, Ontario, Ca ...
.


External links


Literatronica: Adaptive Digital NarrativeLiteratronica: an interview with creator Juan B. GutierrezJuan B Gutierrez personal web page
Hypertext Electronic literature