The code is programmed so that when a data point in the algorithm reaches the average one-way driving distance a person has to travel to receive reproductive care, the softer sounds a pregnant person makes between contractions in labor are played. Then, when this average one-way driving distance increases as the result of state abortion bans, the sound installation plays the powerful, raw, guttural noises that accompany a contraction. Data for the algorithm was obtained by the Guttmacher Institute, a leading research and policy organization on sexual and reproductive health and rights worldwide. The sounds are as personal as are the real-life effects of the Supreme Court decision. Wright, a mother of two, hopes to galvanize those who believe in the self-determination of human beings over their own bodies and against compulsory parenthood.