Artificial Intelligibility is the name of a project initiated by the Institute for Advanced Architecture in 2001 in order to develop a software system for the accumulation and display of various social networks comprising architecture.
The "Mapping Architecture" prototype allows users of the World Wide Web to browse the AI database as a series of static (although dynamically generated) images. For example, by clicking on Le Corbusier or Rem Koolhaas, the user fixes their perspective at a particular point in information space, and moves on from there.
While the links above privilege legibility (and consequently only show one "degree of separation"), the following links broaden visibility to three degrees, sometimes at the expense of clarity: Bruno Taut or Joan Ockman