
As a designer at Apple in the 1980s, Gromala’s job was to imagine how people would use paradigm-shifting technologies. Drawing on a lifetime love of photographing roadkill and things that provoke gut responses, she was consumed by wondering how multimedia affected our many senses, including our inner, usually quiescent senses.
Gromala doggedly pursued this at Yale University, earning an MFA. Because Yale was something of a Montessori school for grown-ups though, most of her classes were in the School of Medicine and Philosophy departments. In 1990, Gromala was selected to create one of the very first Virtual Reality (VR) artworks by the Banff Centre for the Arts. With choreographer Yacov Sharir, Gromala used MRI data of her body as the immersive environment. Their use of stereoscopy, spatialized sound, 6 degrees of freedom and lack of any rectilinear forms provoked the proprioceptive sense of where we are in our bodies. This and other VR works have been been recognized by numerous art, design and computer science organizations, by the U.S. Congress and the government of Canada.
Expert in art, design and computer science, Gromala was tapped to develop and teach the first multidisciplinary new media programs at the University of Texas, the University of Washington and Georgia Tech. She was a member of prominent labs: UW’s virtual reality lab (HITLab) and Georgia Tech’s GVU. There, Gromala developed virtual reality (VR) for phobias, anxiety, Parkinson’s and for children who were undergoing chemotherapy. Her current VR work is in use at 20+ hospitals worldwide.
Dr. Gromala earned one of the first PhDs in interactive art in the School of Computing Science at the University of Plymouth in England.
She is a senior Fulbright Scholar and consults for the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Named the Art Gallery Chair for SIGGRAPH’s millenial year, Gromala curated the largest number of interactive arts since SIGGRAPH’s inception. Using these works as exemplars, Gromala and Jay Bolter challenged a fundamental precept of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) n the MIT Press book, Windows and Mirrors.
Gromala is the founding Director of the Transforming Pain Research Group. Funded by national research councils and philanthropists, the pain physicians, computer scientists, neuroscientist, psychophysicist, media producers, designers and artists who comprise this team develop new technologies to help the estimated 1 in 5 North Americans who suffer from the “silent epidemic,” chronic pain. Diane Gromala is a Full Professor and holds the Canada Research Chair at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. She is currently a Visiting Scholar and Artist-in-Residence at UCLA’s California Nanosystems Institute.