On 18/11/2014 10:42, "alex" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>First International Conference on Live Coding
>13-15th July 2015, University of Leeds, UK
>http://www.livecodenetwork.org/iclc2015/
>
>With pleasure we announce the initial call for papers and performances
>for the
>first International Conference on Live Coding, hosted by ICSRiM in the
>School
>of Music, University of Leeds, UK.
>
>This conference follows a long line of international events on liveness in
>computer programming; the Changing Grammars live audio programming
>symposium in
>Hamburg 2004, the LOSS Livecode festival in Sheffield 2007, the annual
>Vivo
>festivals in Mexico City from 2012, the live.code.festival in Karlsruhe,
>the
>LIVE workshop at ICSE on live programming, and Dagstuhl Seminar 13382 on
>Collaboration and Learning through Live Coding in 2013, as well as
>numerous
>workshops, concerts, algoraves and conference special sessions. It also
>follows
>a series of Live Coding Research Network symposia on diverse topics, and
>the
>activities of the TOPLAP community since 2004. We hope that this
>conference
>will act as a confluence for all this work, helping establish live coding
>as an
>interdisciplinary field, exploring liveness in symbolic abstractions, and
>understanding the perceptual, creative, productive, philosophical and
>cultural
>consequences.
>
>The proceedings will be published with ISSN, and there will also be an
>follow-on opportunity to contribute to a special issue of the Journal on
>Performance Arts and Digital Media; details will be announced soon.
>
>Timeline
>
>* Templates available and submissions system open: 8th December 2014
>* Performance submissions deadline: 16th February 2015
>* Paper submissions deadline: 1st March 2015
>* Notification of results: 10th April 2015
>* Camera ready deadline: 10th May 2015
>* Conference: 13-15th July 2015
>
>Submission categories
>
>* Long papers (6-12 pages)
>* Short papers (4-6 pages)
>* Poster/demo papers (2-4 pages)
>* Performances (1 page abstract and technical rider)
>
>ICLC is an interdisciplinary conference, so a wide range of approaches are
>encouraged and we recognise that the appropriate length of a paper may
>vary
>considerably depending on the approach. However, all submissions must
>propose
>an original contribution to Live Coding research, cite relevant previous
>work,
>and apply appropriate research methods.
>
>The following long list of topics, contributed by early career
>researchers in
>the field, are indicative of the breadth of research we wish to include:
>
>* Live coding and the body; tangibility, gesture, embodiment
>* Creative collaboration through live code
>* Live coding in education, teaching and learning
>* Live coding terminology and the cognitive dimensions of notation
>* Live language and interface design
>* CUIs: Code as live user interface
>* Domain specific languages, and the live coding ecosystem
>* Programming language experience design: visualising live process and
>state in
>code interfaces
>* Virtuosity, flow, aesthetics and phenomenology of live code
>* Live coding: composition, improvisation or something else?
>* Time in notation, process, and perception
>* Live coding of and inside computer games and virtual reality
>* Live programming languages as art: esoteric and idiosyncratic systems
>* Bugfixing in/as performance
>* Individual expression in shared live coding environments
>* Live coding across the senses and algorithmic synaesthesia
>* Audience research and ethnographies of live coding
>* Live coding without computers
>* Live coding before Live Coding; historical perspectives on live
>programming
>languages
>* Heritage, vintage and nostalgia bringing the past to life with code
>* Live coding in public and in private
>* Cultural processes of live programming language design
>* General purpose live programming languages and live coding operating
>systems
>* Connecting live coding with ancient arts or crafts practice
>* Live coding and the hacker/maker movement: DIY and hacker aesthetics
>* Critical reflections; diversity in the live coding community
>* The freedom of liveness, and free/open source software
>
>Submissions which work beyond the above are encouraged, but all should
>have
>live coding research or practice at their core. Please contact us if you
>have
>any questions about remit.
>
>Contact
>
>Please email feedback and/or questions to [log in to unmask]
>
>http://www.livecodenetwork.org/iclc2015/
>
>___________________________________________________________
>
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