Artificial Intelligence in Music and Art
Special Track of the 19th International FLAIRS Conference
Melbourne Beach, Florida, Florida, May 11-13, 2006
http://aima2006.dei.uc.pt/
INTRODUCTION
The application of Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques in the fields of Art
and Music is a significant and captivating research area. There is a growing
interest in applications of AI in visual arts, music, graphics, video, sound,
architecture, design of artifacts, and other creative endeavors.
OBJECTIVE
This special track will provide an international forum for
researchers, scientists,
and practitioners to present results from on-going AI work in the fields of
Music and Art. The objective of this track is to foster the creation,
refinement
and transfer of such ideas, and to promote their cross-fertilization
over all AI
paradigms and relevant application domains.
LOCATION
The track will be held in Melbourne Beach, Florida, on May 11-13, 2006, in
conjunction with the FLAIRS 2006 conference
(http://www.indiana.edu/~flairs06/).
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
We invite original and unpublished contributions on AI applications in the
analysis, composition, generation, interpretation, performance, evaluation,
classification, and data mining of artifacts from various creative
endeavors and
fields, such as visual art, graphics, video, music, sounds,
architecture, design of
physical artifacts, sculpture, literature, poetry, etc.
Accepted papers will be presented at the conference and included in
the FLAIRS 2006
conference proceedings, published by AAAI Press.
SCOPE AND TOPICS
We invite research from all AI paradigms including symbolic,
statistical, connectionist,
genetic, distributed, and hybrid approaches. The track covers a wide
range of AI
techniques including (but not limited to) cognitive modeling, data mining and
classification, expert systems, generative systems (A-life, chaos,
fractals, L-systems),
grammars, fuzzy logic, genetic algorithms, hidden Markov models,
intelligent agents,
knowledge representation, knowledge-based systems, machine learning,
natural language
processing, neural networks, constraint satisfaction, perception,
planning, reasoning and
inferencing, and swarm intelligence.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Papers must be submitted on-line, following the FLAIRS submission
guidelines, and
no later than November 21, 2005. They must be written in proper
English, no longer
than 6 pages, including references, and formatted in AAAI two-column,
camera-ready
style. Papers must be formatted for US Letter (8-1/2" x 11") paper.
For additional details,
see conference website (http://www.indiana.edu/~flairs06/).
REVIEWING PROCESS
Reviewing will be doubly blind. Authors should remove their names and
affiliations
from submitted papers, and should take reasonable care that their
identity is disguised.
References to own work should be referred to in the third person, e.g.,
"Smith (Smith 2003) has shown...,".
TIMETABLE FOR AUTHORS
Paper submissions are due electronically by November 21, 2005.
Notification letters will be
sent via email by January 20, 2006. Final camera-ready copies are due
electronically by
February 13, 2006.
TRACK ORGANIZERS
Bill Manaris
College of Charleston, USA
http://www.cs.cofc.edu/~manaris
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Penousal Machado
University of Coimbra, Portugal
http://eden.dei.uc.pt/~machado
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IMPORTANT DATES
Submission: November 21, 2005
Notification: January 20, 2006
Camera ready: February 13, 2006
Special Track: May 11-13, 2006
PROGRAM COMMITTEE AND OTHER INFORMATION
http://aima2006.dei.uc.pt/
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