Artists work with fields such as biology, robotics, physical sciences, experimental interface technologies (such as speech, gesture, face recognition), artificial intelligence, and information visualization.
Ars Electronica, which is considered one of leading world organizations concerned with experimental arts, decided at some point before 2010[when?]
The Leonardo journal published by MIT Press has a 40-year history of "promoting and documenting work at the intersection of the arts, sciences, and technology, and... encouraging and stimulating collaboration between artists, scientists, and technologists.
For example, The Arts Catalyst in the UK seeks to "extend the practice of artists engaging with scientific processes, facilities and technologies in order to reveal and illuminate the social, political and cultural contexts that brought them into being"[2] through public symposia, exhibitions, and commissions.
SymbioticA in Australia is an "artistic laboratory dedicated to the research, learning and critique of life sciences.
[6] Courses cover topics such as art & biology, robotics, locative media, and physical computing.