Fwd: [IFIP-EC-NEWS] IFIP ECS 2010: Call for Papers
First Call for Papers -------------------------------------------------------------- 2nd IFIP Entertainment Computing Symposium (ECS 2010) "Cultural Computing: New Frontier for Entertainment Computing" Supported by IFIP=ACM+ACS+BCS+CIE+GI+IEEE+IPSJ+KIISE+SEE++ Hold in conjunction with 21th IFIP World Computer Congress September 20-23, 2010, Brisbane, AU * http://www.wcc2010.org/ecs2010 -------------------------------------------------------------- Deadlines: January 31,2010: A full paper (8 to 10 pages) or short paper (4 pages). April 15,2010: Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection. May 15,2010: Full versions of accepted papers (camera-ready). -------------------------------------------------------------- Scope and Topics In the 21st century we are getting into the era of "Cultural Computing" where computers would be able to handle specific forms and human characteristics that hide behind each culture. In this symposium we want to introduce and discuss still unveiled possibilities of Cultural Computing which would analyze and visualize substantial cultural issues such as sensitivity, memory, spirituality, storytelling, racial characteristics, etc. that have not been treated in computer science and engineering so far. There are various possibilities in this area. From art point of view, Cultural Computing could go beyond the present media art by treating various kinds of cultural issues. From technology aspect, it would open up a new area in computer technologies that so far have been only treating the digitization of cultural heritages/contents to preserve them. The 2nd IFIP Entertainment Computing Symposium attempts to focus this emerging and challenging area by bring various fields together and explore boundaries and new frontiers. This symposium will be a single track, highly selective set of presentations and discussions of visionary concepts, advanced technology, interactive demonstrations/installations, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------- Topics: The symposium will include, but is not limited to, the following topics: 1) Preservation of cultural heritage using computers 2) Preservation of traditional technologies using computers 3) Treating models and types in cultural contents 4) Education of cultures using computers 5) Interactive installation treating cultural contents -------------------------------------------------------------- Paper submission: English written papers presenting original research in conference topics are being sought. Proceedings of IFIP ECS 2010 will be published in the IFIP ICT (Advances in Information and Communication Technology) Series by Springer. More information can be found in due course at http://www.wcc2010.org. Acceptance will be based on quality, relevance and originality of the work. -------------------------------------------------------------- Symposium Co-Chairs: Naoko Tosa (JP), Hyun S. Yang (KR), Fazel Naghdy (AU) Program Co-Chairs: Kevin Wong (AU), Paolo Ciancarini (IT), Matthias Rauterberg (NL), Ryohei Nakatsu (SG)
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I thought this might be of interest to certain people on the list, please do forward to others as you see fit. As usual, apologies for cross postings. Best wishes, Ben. The Big Gaydar Workshop: Connections, Tensions and Digital Interventions 28th May 2010, University of Sussex Call for Papers, Interest & Participation Gaydar has recently turned ten. In the decade it has been operating, the website has survived the bursting of the dotcom bubble, the rise of competitor services and the evolution of 2.0 social networking practices. Yet Gaydar continues to be the number one gay male dating site in Britain and the brand now extends beyond the web. Gaydar is a radio station, a brand, a sponsor of international gay events, a charity donor, a marketing tool and part of a company that also owns two commercial venues, in the heart of Londons gay district. Gaydar is ? As befits a phenomenon of this size, Gaydar encounters contradictions that reflect the tensions operating in contemporary gay male subculture. It is both a site for HIV prevention work and a space in which barebackers can find one another. It funds gay Pride events, yet is often criticised for ignoring the margins of the LGBT community. It provides opportunities for queer youth to explore their sexual identities while also interpolating gay men into a dizzying array of categories. It allows users to advertise themselves to one another, and mines that information for financial gain. It is also a digital environment firmly rooted in the material realities and the corporeal pleasures of the physical world. The big Gaydar workshop Organised in conjunction with the University of Salford, this one-day multidisciplinary workshop is hosted by the Centre for Material Digital Culture at the University of Sussex and will take place on 28th May 2010. Departing from the standard conference format, the organisers are keen to organise the day around a series of round-table discussions that explore different facets of and interactions with Gaydar. The topic of these discussions is currently open and at this stage we welcome proposals and suggestions from interested individuals, groups and organisations. Participation Do you work with, or find work through Gaydar? Have you used Gaydar for political or activist reasons? Do you use Gaydar for professional or personal motives? Do you have an opinion about Gaydar? We are interested in hearing from you! Each roundtable discussion will open with between one and three short positioning papers (5 minutes max). Following these brief presentations, the discussion will be opened up to the floor for response and further input. The organisers are keen to employ a range of techniques to ensure that all those who wish to speak get a chance to do so, and those preferring other forms of communication (Twitter, blogging etc) can exploit these technologies. We strongly encourage collaborative work within and across industries, disciplines and sectors and seek input from academic and non-academic experts alike. Interventions and positioning papers can take a variety of forms and should be aimed at opening up the discussion. The details Registration costs £10 (payable in advance) and refreshments will be provided. Please note that places are strictly limited and will, in the first instance, be allocated to those offering discussion topics and positioning papers. If you have a proposal for a discussion topic, or would like to discuss the workshop, and your potential involvement in it, please send an email (including your name, affiliation and any proposal) to the organisers. Timetable for application Closing date for discussion topics: 19th February 2010 Closing date for positioning papers: 30th April 2010 Workshop date: 28th May 2010 Organisers Dr Sharif Mowlabocus School of Media, Film and Music University of Sussex s.j.mowlabocus@sussex.ac.uk Prof Ben Light School of Media, Music and Performance University of Salford b.light@salford.ac.uk
participants (2)
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Ben Light -
jeremy hunsinger