Sébastien CajotSébastien is a postdoctoral researcher at the Industrial Process and Energy Systems Engineering (IPESE) Group at Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland. He holds a Master in environmental sciences and engineering from EPFL and Kyoto University, and a PhD in energy from EPFL.
During his PhD, he has worked as researcher on urban and energy system planning at the European Institute for Energy Research (EIFER) in Karlsruhe, Germany between 2014 and 2017.
Prior to that, he worked during two and half years as business process analyst at the environmental and energy department of canton de Vaud, Switzerland. There, his focus was also to develop a system of indicators to inform the local government on the efficiency of the State’s energy policy.
Darío Negueruela Del CastilloDarío Negueruela currently heads the division of fundamental research at ALICE. In 2017 he completed his doctoral thesis "The City of Extended Emotions". Prior to this, Dario studied at Madrid School of Architecture, ETSAM (Diploma of Advanced Studies, 2011), TU Delft, The Netherlands (MSc Arch, 2006) and Westminster, London (BA Arch & Urban design 2002).
His research addresses the mutually constitutive dynamics between space and collective agency. More precisely, his enquiries look into the way in which urban space, through its degree of urbanity, enacts emotionally certain forms of collective agency (social movements) and how in turn these agencies modify and produce new space.
The ubiquitous upsurge of urban protests around the world seem to confirm the equally growing production of literature that deals with the city as a scene of conflict and a device for the production of segregation with the implication of biopolitical control. However, the city is also the scenery that gives birth to many new social movements that seek to respond to this situation by producing new spaces and forms of sociality that are fundamentally distanced from those of institutional city production.
Beyond their consideration as a new urban question or as the result of collective effervescence, Dario's research into these novel forms of social contention seeks to overcome deterministic approaches to the phenomenon of collective agency and spatial framing. It does so through a combination of analysis of spatial practices, perception of spatial affordances and spatial cognitive appraisal through emotional elicitation.
In line with the promising yet largely unexplored Extended Mind thesis, this research explores the phenomena of extended affectivity as a form of distributed cognition of the city.