Aasma Tulika is interested in moments that disturb belief systems, and how apparatuses of control operate in such encounters experienced in everyday life. Her practice locates technological infrastructures as sites to unpack the ways in which power embodies, affects and moves narrative making processes. It is through a form of prodding narratives that circulate on social networks and mass media that she attempts to draw out experiences of ideological disorientation and slips. Her recent work explores the relationship between language and communication, and looks at the ways in which computational systems interpret language and participate in processes of social interaction and conditions of knowledge production.