ASU is assembling a dream team to train the creative workforce of the future and building facilities that will allow graduates to take advantage of open positions in emerging technology.
“Everyone is talking about the evolving metaverse and how our lives — work, education, social, cultural — will move seamlessly between physical and virtual worlds,” said Steven J. Tepper, dean and director of the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. “These worlds need to be artful and imaginative and create a greater range of human empathy, creativity and expression. That’s why we are assembling the world’s best engineers, artists, designers and storytellers across three cities, with access to every technology imaginable.”
Last December, led by Assistant Professor Robert LiKamWa, ASU students demonstrated how they used virtual reality to explore climate change and presented a class project they developed in Dreamscape Learn, a new fully immersive VR learning system for the ASU community and beyond. Their audience included ASU President Michael Crow and Walter Parkes, the Hollywood producer who is now CEO of Dreamscape Immersive.
“These emerging technologies will change the future, and ASU will drive how these technologies are applied,” said Jacob Pinholster, associate dean of enterprise design and operations in the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. Pinholster is the founding director of ASU’s Media and Immersive eXperience (MIX) Center, which is part of the new ASU at Mesa City Center, and head of graduate programs in interdisciplinary digital media and performance design.