Category Archives: Conference

Conferences for March 2011 onwards

STARTDUECONFERENCETHEMELOCATION
13-Jun-1115-Mar-11immersive worlds 2011Interacting With Immersive WorldsOntario
15-Jun-1114-Mar-11GLSGames Learning SocietyMadison
20-Jun-1113-Mar-11web3d 2011Paris
4-Jul-1115-Mar-11iacap 2011The Computational Turn: Past, Presents, Futures?Aarhus
4-Jul-1118-Mar-11CHINZComputer-Human InteractionWaikato
5-Jul-117-Mar-11malacca heritageMalacca International Heritage ConferenceMalacca
17-Jul-118-Apr-11moodlemoot auSydney
17-Jul-1117-Apr-11Contact Zone: MuseumsMuseums, Theory, PracticeLinköping
22-Jul-1128-Mar-11GETGame and Entertainment TechnologyRome
25-Jul-1128-Mar-11scientific theatreDesigning Intelligent EnvironmentsNottingham
5-Aug-1115-Apr-11SBIM 2011Sketch-Based Interfaces and ModelingVancouver
7-Aug-1115-Apr-11SIGGRAPH 2011 realtimeliveComputer Graphics & Interactive TechniquesVancouver
7-Aug-116-May-11SIGGRAPH 2011 late breakingComputer Graphics and Interactive TechniquesVancouver
24-Aug-1115-Mar-11Imagining spacesIMAGINING SPACES / PLACESHelsinki
27-Aug-117-Mar-11High rise shuffleModern Architecture-aalto AcademyJyväskylä
5-Sep-117-Apr-11interact 2011Building Bridges short papersLisbon
13-Sep-1122-Apr-11Designs on eLearningHelsinki
14-Sep-1118-Apr-11digra 2011Think Design PlayUtrecht
20-Sep-1111-Apr-11jvrc2011Joint Virtual Reality ConferenceNottingham
5-Oct-1115-Apr-11ICECEntertainment ComputingVancouver
13-Oct-111-Apr-11ACADIA2011INTEGRATION THROUGH COMPUTATIONBanff
16-Oct-11?vastVirtual Reality, Archaeology + Cultural HeritageAlexandria
19-Oct-1115-Mar-11Desire 2011Creativity and Innovation in DesignEindhoven Netherlands
20-Oct-1131-Mar-11ECGBL2011European Conferences on Games Based LearningAthens
26-Oct-1111-May-11ISMAR2011Mixed and Augmented RealityBasel
3-Nov-1125-Mar-11Creativity and CognitionCreativity and TechnologyGeorgia Tech
3-Nov-114-Apr-11IRVWInnovative Research in Virtual WorldsCoventry
8-Nov-111-Jun-11ACEAdvances in Computer EntertainmentLisbon
16-Nov-1115-Apr-11SIGRADI:Augmented Cultureaugmented cultureSanta Fe
27-Nov-114-Apr-11LIHE 2011Teaching into learning via simulations and gamesSydney
28-Nov-1117-Jun-11ozchi2011Design, Culture and InteractionCanberra
13-Dec-1117-May-11Siggraph Asia 2011Computer Graphics & Interactive Techniques in AsiaHong Kong

CFP: Scientific Theatre (SciT’11) Multidisciplinary Approach to Designing Intelligent Environments

Call: Scientific Theatre (SciT’11) – Multidisciplinary Approach to Designing Intelligent Environments
International Workshop Scientific Theatre (SciT’11)
Multidisciplinary Approach to Designing Intelligent Environments

In conjunction with the 7th International Conference on Intelligent Environments (IE’11)
Nottingham – UK. 25th-26th of July 2011 http://scientific-theatre.com

Important dates:

Paper submission: 28th March 2011 (via the Scit’11 submission system)
Notification of acceptance: 25th April 2011
Paper final submission (with revisions): 9th May 2011

New paper on Biofeedback and Architecture to be presented at CAADRIA 2011, 27-29 April

I just sent the final paper off to the organizers of CAADRIA 2011.
It is rather a rare paper by Andrew Dekker and myself  as it talks about atmosphere, 19th Century German empathy theory, Heidegger (indirectly), Wild Divine biofeedback and Zombies. Actually it is not really about Zombies but about how indirect biofeedback could be used for architectural visualization, social worlds and virtual places in general. I was trying to make the case for indirect biofeedback to augment the environment, and to allow enhanced information or interaction based on mastering/achieving calm, rather than on raising excitement levels. It is a step in my attempt to convey an experience of holy places and cultural sites using (indirect) biofeedback. Biofeedback has been seen as highly subjective, variable, and unreliable as a direct interaction method which is one of the reasons I am so interested it as indirect and augmenting rather than direct and dominant. Anyway, the abstract follows:

INDIRECT BIOFED ARCHITECTURE
Strategies to best utilise biofeedback tools and interaction metaphors within digital architectural environments

This paper explains potential benefits of indirect biofeed-back used within interactive virtual environments, and reflects on an earlier study that allowed for the dynamic modification of a virtual environment’s graphic shaders, music and artificial intelligence (of Non Playing Characters) based on the biofeedback of the player. It then examines both the potential and the issues in applying biofeed-back (already effective for games) to digital architectural environ-ments, and suggests potential uses such as personalization, object creation, atmospheric augmentation, filtering, and tracking.

CFPS: updated

DUECONFERENCELOCATIONSTART
25-Feb-11Game SummitWashington USA22-Jun-11
28-Feb-11digra 2011Utrecht Netherlands14-Sep-11
28-Feb-11IADIS IHCIRome Italy24-Jul-11
28-Feb-11alt-hciNewcastle UK4-Jul-11
28-Feb-11Create11London UK23-Jun-11
28-Feb-11GETRome Italy22-Jul-11
28-Feb-11immersive worlds 2011Ontario Canada13-Jun-11
1-Mar-11ACADIA2011Banff Canada13-Oct-11
7-Mar-11GLSMadison Wi, USA15-Jun-11
7-Mar-11High rise shuffleJyväskylä, Finland27-Aug-11
7-Mar-11malacca heritageMalacca Malaysia23-Jun-11
7-Mar-11moodlemoot auSydney Australia17-Jul-11
15-Mar-11Imagining spacesHelsinki Finland24-Aug-11
18-Mar-11ChiNZWaikato NZ5-Jul-11
25-Mar-11Creativity and CognitionGeorgia Tech3-Nov-11
31-Mar-11ECGBL2011Athens Greece20-Oct-11
4-Apr-11IRVWCoventry UK3-Nov-01
4-Apr-11LIHE 2011Sydney Australia27-Nov-11
7-Apr-11interact 2011Lisbon Portugal5-Sep-11
15-Apr-11SIGRADI:Augmented CultureSanta Fe, Argentina16-Nov-11
15-Apr-11ICECVancouver Canada5-Oct-11
17-Apr-11Contact Zone: MuseumsLinköping Sweden17-Jul-11
4-May-11EADPorto, Portugal1-Sep-10
15-May-11ISMAR2011Basel Switzerland26-Oct-11
17-May-11Desire 2011Eindhoven Netherlands19-Oct-11
17-May-11Siggraph Asia 2011Hong Kong13-Dec-11
1-Jun-11ACELisbon Portugal8-Nov-11

CFPS :upcoming for January and February

cfp Design History Society Barcelona 2011

Design History Society Annual Conference, 8-10 September 2011, Barcelona Theme: Design Activism and Social Change

Venues: Universitat de Barcelona and Foment de les Arts Decoratives Convenor: Guy Julier
Organizers: Fundacio Historia del Disseny, Barcelona

Design activism has emerged in recent years as a term to denote creative practices that invoke social, political and environmental agency. Typically, it distances itself from commercial or mainstream public policy-driven approaches. Instead, it embraces marginal, non-profit or politically engaged design theories, articulations and actions.

This conference offers an important opportunity for design students, academics and practitioners to participate in the development of historical enquiry into design activism. It welcomes the presentation of original research that helps deepen and widen our understanding of its practices and theories, contexts and discourses. The types of design expression that this conference includes, but are not limited to, are professional and non-professional industrial, graphic, craft, textile, fashion, urban, spatial, interior, digital and service design.

Further details:www.historiadeldisseny.org/congres

Closing date for receipt of abstracts: 31 January 2011

cfp: ECGBL 2011 Athens 20-21 October 2011

This is a First call for papers for the 5th European Conference on Games Based Learning (ECGBL) being held at The National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece on the 20-21 October 2011.

Over the last ten years, the way in which education and training is delivered has changed considerably with the advent of new technologies. One such new technology that holds considerable promise for helping to engage learners is Games-Based Learning (GBL). The Conference offers an opportunity for scholars and practitioners interested in the issues related to GBL to share their thinking and research findings. Papers can cover various issues and aspects of GBL in education and training: technology and implementation issues associated with the development of GBL; use of mobile and MMOGs for learning; pedagogical issues associated with GBL; social and ethical issues in GBL; GBL best cases and practices, and other related aspects. We are particularly interested in empirical research that addresses whether GBL enhances learning. This Conference provides a forum for discussion, collaboration and intellectual exchange for all those interested in any of these fields of research or practice.

The conference committee welcomes both academic and practitioner papers on a wide range of topics using a range of scholarly approaches including theoretical and empirical papers employing qualitative, quantitative and critical methods. Action research, case studies and work in progress/posters are welcomed approaches. PhD Research, proposals for roundtable discussions, non-academic contributions and product demonstrations based on the main themes are also invited.

You can find calls for papers for these tracks at:

http://academic-conferences.org/ecgbl/ecgbl2011/ecgbl11-call-papers.htm

Conference proceedings are submitted for accreditation on publication. Please note that depending on the accreditation body this process can take up to several months.

Papers accepted for the conference will be published in the conference proceedings, subject to author registration. Papers presented at the conference will also be considered for publication in a special issue of the Electronic Journal of e-Learning.

For the first time there will be a prize for the best PhD paper and the best Poster presented at the conference.

cfp: MiT7 @ MIT May 13-15, 2011

MiT7 unstable platforms: the promise and peril of transition

Submissions accepted on a rolling basis until Friday, March 4, 2011.

Conference dates: May 13-15, 2011 at MIT.
Conference website: web.mit.edu/comm-forum/mit7/

Has the digital age confirmed and exponentially increased the cultural instability and creative destruction that are often said to define advanced capitalism? Does living in a digital age mean we may live and die in what the novelist Thomas Pynchon has called “a ceaseless spectacle of transition”? The nearly limitless range of design options and communication choices available now and in the future is both exhilarating and challenging, inciting innovation and creativity but also false starts, incompatible systems, planned obsolescence.

Monday and Tuesday-interactive entertainment conference Wellington!

On Monday and Tuesday I will be in Wellington New Zealand, at the College of Creative Arts – Old Museum Building, Buckle St, Wellington, Teagardens (upper level east part of the old Museum Building), for..

The 7th Australasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment-ie2010!!

The Katie Salen Keynote is open to the public!

Katie Salen- Leading game designer and author of ” The Rules of Play” will be at the IE2010 conference at Massey next week. Her keynote talk is open to the public. Monday 22nd November at 9.30am in the Tea
Gardens, Massey University, Museum Building, Buckle Street, Wellington.
Tickets are $20.00 waged or $5.00 student. Tickets available at the door.

CFP: IAMHIST conference: Media History and Cultural Memory – Denmark

http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/id=14974

Veranstalter:International Association for Media and History (IAMHIST), University of Copenhagen, The Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
Datum, Ort:06.07.2011-09.07.2011, Copenhagen (Denmark)
Deadline:01.12.2010

The International Association for Media and History (IAMHIST) is pleased to announce its XXIV biennial conference, on the theme of Media History and Cultural Memory, to be held at Copenhagen University Wednesday, July 6- Saturday, July 9, 2011.

The conference will look at the ways in which media history is interwoven with the concept of cultural memory. Media such as radio, television, film, and the internet are used to create, represent, transmit, revise, and preserve collective constructions of history and identity. Media hold complex and evolving roles in the ways that individuals and groups understand the moments and events of their pasts, at all levels of social organization (local, regional, national, transnational). These understandings inform policy, politics, and the performance of identity, laying the foundation for future interpretations and understandings, and carrying past and present affiliations, conflicts, glory, and trauma forward in time.

Proposals and inquiries should be directed to Karsten Fledelius at
iamhist2011@gmail.com.
The deadline for submissions is December 1, 2010.

not quite a CFP: SIGGRAPH Asia 2011 roars into Hong Kong

The 4th SIGGRAPH Conference and Exhibition on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques in Asia will be held at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Center from 12 to 15 Dec 2011. See, meet, and interact with the international computer graphics community in the heart of Asia and learn from the best in the field in research, animation, art, software, visualization, hardware, games, visual effects, and education.

SIGGRAPH Asia 2011 will see the return of the Art Gallery and the Emerging Technologies programs. The event lineup will also include the Computer Animation Festival, Courses, Technical Papers, Sketches & Posters programs and a Trade Exhibition. The Student Volunteers program will again be offered, to nurture young talents by providing a platform for them to interact with the industry and academia.

Scientists search for Pink and White Terraces treasure | NATIONAL News

Oh dear, someone stole my thunder, luckily they are real geologists 🙂
http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/scientists-search-pink-and-white-terrace-treasure-3897400
A team of geologists and marine scientists are preparing to take to the waters of Lake Rotomahana, hoping to discover that part of the Pink and White Terraces still exist.

The group, from GNS, Waikato University and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, are planning a series of underwater explorations next year to map the lake floor and to gain a better understanding of what happened to the famous geological feature once considered the eighth wonder of the world.

cfp: 8th ACM Conference on Creativity and Cognition

http://dilab.gatech.edu/ccc/index.html
The 8th ACM Conference on Creativity and Cognition will be held from November 3rd through November 6th at Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. The theme of Creativity and Cognition 2011 is Creativity and Technology. We seek to understand human creativity in its many manifestations, to design new interactive techniques and tools to augment and amplify human creativity, and to use computational media technologies to explore new creative processes and artifacts in all human endeavors ranging from the arts to science, from design to education.
We cordially invite submissions to the 8th ACM Conference on Creativity & Cognition (C&C 2011) as well as to the related art program, tutorials, workshops, and graduate student symposium. We welcome contributions from researchers and practitioners, from artists and scientists, from designers, educators and decision makers. Submission deadline (for all kinds of submissions): March 25, 2011. Please see details under Call for Papers and Proposals.

cfp: Foundations of Digital Games 2011

http://www.fdg2011.org/calls.html
JUNE 28-JULY 1, 2011, BORDEAUX FRANCE
The goal of the Foundations of Digital Games conference is to advance the scientific understanding of digital games, with an emphasis on substantial, evidence-based contributions to both the theory and practice of game design, engineering and applications. The 2011 conference will include presentation of peer-reviewed papers and posters, invited talks and panels by academic and industry leaders, workshops and hands-on tutorials.
Paper and Poster Submission: 10 February 2011

cfp: TAG 2011 Conference | Archaeological Research Facility

Theoretical Archaeology Group TAG – USA 2011 University of California – Berkeley

Archaeology of and in the Contemporary World

Date: May 6-8, 2011
Archaeology of the contemporary world; contemporary theory in archaeology; archaeology and its contemporary social context; archaeology, popularly associated with a dusty past, is thoroughly embedded in the contemporary world.

TAG Berkeley invites participants to freely imagine ways in which archaeological theory, practice, politics, and publication articulate with “the contemporary”. Whether looking at how archaeology is represented in popular culture, how archaeologists are examining the events and processes taking place around us today, or how archaeological examination of even distant pasts is bound up in the perspectives of our present lives, archaeologists are not of another time: we are here and now, and our discipline speaks to that time and place.

Confirmed plenary speakers:
Rodney Harrison
Bonnie Clark

Deadline to submit session proposals: November 1

Conference venue: International House, University of California, Berkeley

cfps for November

DUECONFERENCETHEMELOCATIONSTART
1-Nov-10DH2011Digital HumanitiesStanford USA19-Jun-11
1-Nov-10caadfutures 2011Designing togetherLiege Belgium6-Jul-11
1-Nov-10vs-gamesGames and Virtual Worlds for Serious ApplicationsAthens Greece4-May-11
4-Nov-10New directions in the humanitiesGranada Spain8-Jun-11
5-Nov-10SimAUDSimulation for Architecture and DesignBoston MA4-Apr-11
15-Nov-10CAA2011Revive the PastBeijing China12-Apr-11
19-Nov-10SAHANZ2011AudienceBrisbane Australia6-Jul-11
22-Nov-10evo 2011Evolutionary ComputationTorino Italy27-Apr-11
30-Nov-10GAMEON ASIA’2011Digipen Singapore1-Mar-11
1-Dec-10High rise shuffleModern Architecture-aalto AcademyJyväskylä, Finland27-Aug-11
10-Dec-10C&T2011Communities and TechnologiesBrisbane Australia29-Jun-11
13-Dec-10icc2011Computational CreativityMexico27-Apr-11
23-Dec-10ah2011augmented humansTokyo Japan13-Mar-11
10-Jan-11nordes2011Making Design Matter!Helsinki Finland31-May-11
10-Jan-11interact 2011Building BridgesLisbon Portugal5-Sep-11
10-Jan-11IASDR 2011Design ResearchDelft Netherlands31-Oct-11
18-Jan-11SIGGRAPH 2011Computer Graphics and Interactive TechniquesVancouver Canada25-Jul-11
21-Jan-11BHCI 2011Health, Wealth & HappinessNewcastle UK4-Jul-11
1-Feb-11ecaade 2011Respecting Fragile PlacesLlubljana Slovenia21-Sep-11
7-Feb-11ECSCWAarhus Denmark24-Sep-11
7-Mar-11malacca heritageMalacca International Heritage ConferenceMalacca Malaysia5-Jul-11
4-May-11EADEuropean Academy of Design: The Endless EndPorto, Portugal1-Sep-10
?Contact Zone: MuseumsLinkoping Sweden7-Jul-11

cfp: Digital Humanities

Digital Humanities 2011
Call for Papers Hosted by Stanford University

19-22 June 2011
http://dh2011.stanford.edu

Abstract deadline: November 1, 2010 (Midnight GMT).

Please note: The Program Committee will not be offering an extension to the deadline as has become customary in recent years. The deadline of November 1 is firm. If you intend to submit a proposal for DH2011, you need to submit it via the electronic submission form on the conference website by November 1

notes at the European Science Foundation/COST Networked Humanities Conference, Art History In The Web

I am at the above conference in Acquafredda, Italy. Acquafredda lies roughly 200 km south of Naples, most here are Art Historians or Data Mining-IT specialists so it is a relatively unusual gathering. Many are German but there are also Slovak, Ukrainian, Luxemborgian, Dutch, Spanish, British, Canadian/Estonian, Brazilian/NZ and four Americans. It is the last day, Day 4. Some of the issues that have not been resolved include:

  • the future of museums and how to use/fight the Internet, and use/avoid social media such as Facebook (“the third biggest country”)
  • how to include text with 3D reconstructions
  • what is the scope  extent of art history?
  • why do people confuse network with Internet and Internet with World Wide Web?
  • and, in my case, avoiding violence in games.

I was asked many years ago how to teach students non-violent but engaging game design and it is something I will have to return to, and also to the philosophical notions of exactly what is violence. To suggest that heritage is a violent controlling process is one thing, and debatable, but that does not excuse the creation and promotion of violence, especially if it is unnecessary. On the other hand much of many past cultures does involve violence. Should we avoid or ignore the bloody past? Something to muse on.

cfp: 2nd Island Dynamics Conference – An International Island Studies Conference

http://www.islanddynamics.org/conference.html

2nd Island Dynamics Conference

Taking Malta out of the Box

11—15 May 2011, Valletta, Malta

Malta may be small, but with a history featuring the Greeks, Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Normans, Knights of St John, and British, its heritage is monumental. Located at the heart of the Mediterranean, the Maltese archipelago is a bustling microstate. Its tourism industry thrives on the islands’ beautiful scenery, which forms the backdrop to countless heritage attractions, including three UNESCO World Heritage Sites. From megalithic temples to Baroque bastions, paleochristian catacombs to Medieval cityscapes, Malta is a culture lover’s paradise.
At the 2nd Island Dynamics Conference, representatives from academia, government, and business will explore islands, past and present, worldwide. The conference theme addresses how island identities develop alongside their cultures and economies. Henry Glassie, Godfrey Baldacchino, and David Lowenthal are keynote speakers.
Attendance to this island studies conference is open to everyone. Reduced registration rates of £60 (standard) and £36 (students and Malta residents) are available until 31 December, after which prices may rise.