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Doctoral Consortium at the International Conference on Computational Creativity 2019, Charlotte, NC, USA (http://www.computationalcreativity.net/iccc2019/ <http://www.computationalcreativity.net/iccc2019/>) Due Date May 23, 2019, Workshop Date June 18, 2019

The Doctoral Consortium (DC) is a one-day workshop designed to nurture PhD students by providing them with opportunities to receive feedback on their research and connect with other students. The workshop has three parts: short presentations by students, one-on-one feedback from researchers in computational creativity on their research and a Q&A panel session.

We invite submissions from students at all stages of their candidature, from just starting out to writing up. Students who are in the early stages can submit a short, one-page abstract on their work and deliver a lightning talk (2 minutes) on the main themes of their proposed research Students who are further along can submit a long abstract of up to 4 pages and give a longer (10 minute) talk. It is recommended, but not required, that those who are in the early-to-mid stages of their candidature choose the first option, while those whose work has begun producing results should opt for the second. After the presentations we will break into small groups, each led by an experienced computational creativity researcher for group and one-on-one feedback. The consortium will close with a panel of those researchers conducting a Q&A with the students and discussing issues relating to conducting computational creativity research.

SUBMISSIONS

To apply, please submit the following materials, as a single PDF file titled with your last name followed by -DC, to [log in to unmask]:

1. A Cover Page (containing your PhD topic and area, your institution, when you started your candidature and your supervisor’s name.

2. A CV (half page) listing your education, background, experience, and (if you have them) publications.

3. ONE of the following two options:

a. For early stage students: a short abstract (max 1 page) describing their research and situating it within the field of computational creativity.
OR
b. For students who are further along: a long abstract in ICCC format (as per http://computationalcreativity.net/iccc2019/call/ but with a max length of 4 pages, describing their research, situating it within the field of computational creativity, and presenting any preliminary results.

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