Evomusart 2014. LEONARDO special section and 2nd CFP

Event Dates

Apr 23, 2014 - Apr 25, 2014

Location

Granada

Submission Deadline

Nov 01, 2013

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Please distribute

(Apologies for cross posting)

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NEWS:LEONARDO Special Section

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Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit expanded versions

of their work for a planned special section on Evolutionary Art of the

MIT Press journal “Leonardo”.

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CALL FOR PAPERS

evomusart 2014

http://www.evostar.org/cfpEvoMUSART.html

3rd International Conference on Evolutionary and Biologically Inspired

Music, Sound, Art and Design

April 2014, GRANADA, Spain

Part of evo* 2014

evo*: http://www.evostar.org

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New this year: Special track on Artificial Neural Networks applied to

Music, Sound, Art and Design

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Following the success of previous events and the importance of the

field of evolutionary and biologically inspired (artificial neural

network, swarm, alife) music, sound, art and

design, evomusart has become an evo* conference with independent

proceedings since 2012. Thus, evomusart 2014 is the twelfth European

Event and the third International Conference on Evolutionary and

Biologically Inspired Music, Sound, Art and Design.

The use of biologically inspired techniques for the development of

artistic systems is a recent, exciting and significant area of

research. There is a growing interest in the application of these

techniques in fields such as: visual art and music generation,

analysis, and interpretation; sound synthesis; architecture; video;

poetry; design; and other creative tasks.

The main goal of evomusart 2014 is to bring together researchers who

are using biologically inspired computer techniques for artistic

tasks, providing the opportunity to promote, present and discuss

ongoing work in the area.

The event will be held in April, 2014 in Granada, Andalusia, Spain, as

part of the evo* event.

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Publication Details

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Submissions will be rigorously reviewed for scientific and artistic

merit. Accepted papers will be presented orally or as posters at the

event and included in the evomusart proceedings, published by Springer

Verlag in a dedicated volume of the Lecture Notes in Computer Science

series. The acceptance rate at evomusart 2013 was 30.5% for papers

accepted for oral presentation, or 44.4% for oral and poster

presentation combined. The evomusart 2013 submissions received on

average 3.4 reviews each.

New this year: submitters are strongly encouraged to provide in all

papers a link for download of media demonstrating their results,

whether music, images, video, or other media types. Links should be

anonymised for double-blind review, e.g. using a URL shortening

service.

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Topics of interest

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Submissions should concern the use of biologically inspired computer

techniques — e.g. Evolutionary Computation, Artificial Life,

Artificial Neural Networks, Swarm Intelligence, other artificial

intelligence techniques — in the generation, analysis and

interpretation of art, music, design, architecture and other artistic

fields. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

— Generation

– Biologically Inspired Design and Art — Systems that create

drawings, images, animations, sculptures, poetry, text, designs,

webpages, buildings, etc.;

– Biologically Inspired Sound and Music — Systems that create

musical pieces, sounds, instruments, voices, sound effects, sound

analysis, etc.;

– Robotic-Based Evolutionary Art and Music;

– Other related artificial intelligence or generative techniques in

the fields of Computer Music, Computer Art, etc.;

— Theory

– Computational Aesthetics, Experimental Aesthetics; Emotional

Response, Surprise, Novelty;

– Representation techniques;

– Surveys of the current state-of-the-art in the area; identification

of weaknesses and strengths; comparative analysis and classification;

– Validation methodologies;

– Studies on the applicability of these techniques to related areas;

– New models designed to promote the creative potential of

biologically inspired computation;

— Computer Aided Creativity and computational creativity

– Systems in which biologically inspired computation is used to

promote the creativity of a human user;

– New ways of integrating the user in the evolutionary cycle;

– Analysis and evaluation of: the artistic potential of biologically

inspired art and music; the artistic processes inherent to these

approaches; the resulting artefacts;

– Collaborative distributed artificial art environments;

— Automation

– Techniques for automatic fitness assignment;

– Systems in which an analysis or interpretation of the artworks is

used in conjunction with biologically inspired techniques to produce

novel objects;

– Systems that resort to biologically inspired computation to perform

the analysis of image, music, sound, sculpture, or some other types of

artistic object.

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Important Dates (to be confirmed)

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Submission: November 1 2013

Notification to authors: December 2013

Camera-ready deadline: January 2014

Evo*: April 2014

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Additional information and submission details

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Submit your manuscript, at most 12 A4 pages long, in Springer LNCS

format (instructions downloadable from

http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0) no later

than November 1, 2013 (date to be confirmed).

Submission link: http://myreview.csregistry.org/evomusart14

page limit: 12 pages

The reviewing process will be double-blind; please omit information

about the authors in the submitted paper.

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Programme committee

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Adrian Carballal,University of A Coruna,Spain

Alain Lioret,Paris 8 University,France

Alan Dorin,Monash University,Australia

Alejandro Pazos,University of A Coruna,Spain

Alice Eldridge,Monash University,Australia

Amilcar Cardoso,University of Coimbra,Portugal

Amy K. Hoover,University of Central Florida,USA

Andrew Brown,Griffith University,Australia

Andrew Gildfind,Google, Inc.,Australia

Andrew Horner,University of Science & Technology,Hong Kong

Anna Ursyn,University of Northern Colorado,USA

Antonino Santos,University of A Coruna,Spain

Antonios Liapis,IT University of Copenhagen ,Denmark

Arne Eigenfeldt,Simon Fraser University,Canada

Artemis Sanchez Moroni,Renato Archer Research Center,Brazil

Benjamin Schroeder,Ohio State University,USA

Benjamin Smith,Indianapolis University, Purdue University,Indianapolis,USA

Bill Manaris,College of Charleston,USA

Brian Ross,Brock University,Canada

Carlos Grilo,Instituto Politécnico de Leiria,Portugal

Christian Jacob,University of Calgary,Canada

Colin Johnson,University of Kent,UK

Dan Ashlock,University of Guelph,Canada

Dan Costelloe,Independent Researcher (Solace One Ltd),Ireland

Dan Ventura,Brigham Young University,USA

Daniel Bisig,University of Zurich,Switzerland

Daniel Jones,Goldsmiths College, University of London,UK

Daniel Silva,University of Coimbra,Portugal

Douglas Repetto,Columbia University,USA

Eduardo Miranda,University of Plymouth,UK

Eelco den Heijer,Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam,Netherlands

Eleonora Bilotta ,University of Calabria,Italy

Francois Pachet,Sony CSL Paris,France

Gary Greenfield,University of Richmond,USA

Gary Nelson,Oerlin College,USA

Hans Dehlinger,Independent Artist,Germany

Hernán Kerlleñevich,National University of Quilmes,Argentina

J. E. Rowe,University of Birmingham,UK

Jane Prophet,Independent Artist,UK

Jate Reed,Imperial College,UK

John Collomosse,University of Surrey,UK

Jon McCormack,Monash University,Australia

Jonathan Byrne,University College Dublin,Ireland

Jonathan Eisenmann,Ohio State University,USA

José Fornari,NICS/Unicamp,Brazil

Kate Reed,Imperial College,UK

Marcelo Freitas Caetano,IRCAM,France

Marcos Nadal,University of Illes Balears,Spain

Matthew Lewis,Ohio State University,USA

Mauro Annunziato,Plancton Art Studio,Italy

Maximos Kaliakatsos-Papakostas,University of Patras,Greece

Michael O’Neill,University College Dublin,Ireland

Nicolas Monmarché,University of Tours,France

Pablo Gervás,Universidad Complutense de Madrid,Spain

Palle Dahlstedt,Göteborg University,Sweden

Patrick Janssen,National University of Singapure,Singapure

Paulo Urbano,Universidade de Lisboa,Portugal

Pedro Abreu,University of Coimbra,Portugal

Pedro Cruz,University of Coimbra,Portugal

Penousal Machado,University of Coimbra,Portugal

Peter Bentley,University College London ,UK

Peter Cariani,University of Binghamton,USA

Philip Galanter,Texas A&M College of Architecture,USA

Philippe Pasquier,Simon Fraser University,Canada

Rafael Ramirez,Pompeu Fabra University,Spain

Roger Malina,International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology,USA

Roisin Loughran,University of Limerick,Ireland

Ruli Manurung,University of Indonesia,Indonesia

Scott Draves,Independent Artist,USA

Somnuk Phon-Amnuaisuk,Brunei Institute of Technology,Malaysia

Stephen Todd,IBM,UK

Takashi Ikegami,Tokyo Institute of Technology,Japan

Tim Blackwell,Goldsmiths College, University of London,UK

Troy Innocent,Monash University,Australia

Usman Haque,Haque Design + Research Ltd,UK/Pakistan

Vic Ciesielski,RMIT,Australia

Yang Li,University of Science and Technology Beijing,China

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Conference chairs

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Juan Romero

University of A Coruna, Spain

jj(at)udc.es

James McDermott

University College Dublin, Ireland

jmmcd(at)jmmcd.net

Publication chair

Joao Correia, University of Coimbra

jncor(at)dei.uc.pt