posted by user: mohmaj || 2083 views || tracked by 1 users: [display]

AISBCC 2015 : AISB 2015 Symposium on Computational Creativity

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: https://www.sites.google.com/site/aisb2015cc/
 
When Apr 20, 2015 - Apr 22, 2015
Where UK - University of Kent in Canterbury
Submission Deadline Jan 12, 2015
Notification Due Feb 10, 2015
Final Version Due Feb 24, 2015
Categories    computational creativity   generative arts   artificial intelligence
 

Call For Papers

Extended submission deadline: 12 January 2015

Notification of acceptance: 10 February 2015

Submission of camera-ready papers: 24 February 2015

Convention: 20-22 April 2015
====================================================

Invited Speaker:
Tony Veale

====================================================

Over the last few decades, computational creativity has attracted an increasing number of researchers from both arts and science backgrounds. Philosophers, cognitive psychologists, computer scientists and artists have all contributed to and enriched the literature.

Many argue a machine is creative if it simulates or replicates human creativity (e.g. evaluation of AI systems via a Turing-style test), while others have conceived of computational creativity as an inherently different discipline, where computer generated (art)work should not be judged on the same terms, i.e. as being necessarily producible by a human artist, or having similar attributes, etc.

This symposium aims at bringing together researchers to discuss recent technical and philosophical developments in the field, and the impact of this research on the future of our relationship with computers and the way we perceive them: at the individual level where we interact with the machines, the social level where we interact with each other via computers, or even with machines interacting with each other.

Topics of interest for this symposium include, but not limited to:

* Novel systems and theories in computational creativity, in any domain, e.g. drawing and painting, music, story telling, poetry, games, etc
* The evaluation of computational creative systems, processes and artifacts
* Theory of computational aesthetics
* Representational issues in creativity, including visual and perceptual representations
* Social aspects of computational creativity, and intellectual property issues
* Creative autonomy and constraint
* Computational appreciation of artifacts, including human artwork

Authors of accepted papers (up to 8-pages) will be expected to give 30 minute presentations, including 5 to 10 minutes for questions, on the day of the symposium.

As for last year's symposium, we are considering the publication of a selection of extended and re-reviewed papers from the symposium in a journal special issue. More details will follow!

Related Resources

NAACL 2025   North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-ITCC 2025   2025 5th International Conference on Information Technology and Cloud Computing (ITCC 2025)-EI Compendex
SACI 2025   19th IEEE International Symposium on Applied Computational Intelligence and Informatics
SPIE-Ei/Scopus-DMNLP 2025   2025 2nd International Conference on Data Mining and Natural Language Processing (DMNLP 2025)-EI Compendex&Scopus
ACL 2025   The 63rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
IEEE-Ei/Scopus-CNIOT 2025   2025 IEEE 6th International Conference on Computing, Networks and Internet of Things (CNIOT 2025) -EI Compendex
ISCSIC 2025   2025 9th International Symposium on Computer Science and Intelligent Control(ISCSIC 2025)
AMLDS 2025   IEEE--2025 International Conference on Advanced Machine Learning and Data Science
CSITEC 2025   11th International Conference on Computer Science, Information Technology
IJCNN 2025   International Joint Conference on Neural Networks