[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
CFPs: Workshop on Social Behavior in Music at IEEE SocialCom-09 -- DEADLINE EXTENSION
[Sorry for cross-postings]
***************************************************************************
FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS
***************************************************************************
SBM2009- Social Behavior in Music
www.infomus.org/SBM2009
Vancouver, Canada, August 29, 2009
Workshop in the framework of IEEE Intl. SocialCom-09 Conference
Music making and listening are a clear example of human activities that
are above all interactive and social. On the one hand, however, nowadays
mediated music making and listening is usually still a passive,
non-interactive, non-context sensitive, and non-social experience. The
current electronic technologies have not yet been able to support and
promote these essential aspects. On the other hand, new mediated forms of
sharing music experience in a social context with local or remote users or
as a part of a community are emerging. At the same time we observe an
increasing need for paradigms for embodied and active experience of music
where non-verbal communication channels, and in particular movement and
gesture, play a central role.
This workshop focuses on the social signals and their features that are
most significant for a qualitative and quantitative analysis of social
behavior and experience in music. The workshop will discuss computational
models, algorithms, techniques for analysis of social behavior in music,
their application in concrete test-beds, and their evaluation in
experimental set-ups. We are interested in exploring many-to-many human
interplay, such as the performer-listener, performer-performer, and
listener-listener interaction, in novel scenarios where the distinction
between listeners and performers fades out and users become producers and
consumers of music experience.
WORKSHOP TOPICS
We encourage papers and demos addressing fundamental research issues
including, but not limited to, the following topics:
- theoretical approaches to social behavior in music
- experimental methodologies for analysis of social behavior in music -
computational models of social behavior in music
- analysis of social signals in music
- synchronization of human behavior in music
- analysis of social roles in performers and listeners groups
- analysis of attention and salience in social music experiences
- multimodal interfaces for active and social music experience
- cooperative social environments for participative music experience -
multi-user systems and application for social music experience
ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS
Submissions should follow the IEEE conference paper format.
Submissions should include: title, author(s), affiliation(s), e-mail
address(es), tel/fax number(s), and postal address(es).
The contributions can be submitted at:
http://infomus.org/SBM2009/commence
Both accepted papers and demos will be presented at the workshop as oral
presentation or in a demo session. The accepted contributions will appear
in the Proceedings of Social-Com09 Workshops published by IEEE Computer
Society Press. Authors of accepted contributions will be required to
submit a camera ready version.
At least one author for each accepted paper or demo is required to attend
the workshop to present the work.
Papers submission:
Manuscripts should be 8 pages maximum, including references, tables, and
pictures.
Demo submission:
Proposal for demonstrations should be submitted as a (max) 2-pages
extended abstract including pictures and technical details.
IMPORTANT DATES
May 17, 2009: Submissions deadline
June 5, 2009: Notification of acceptance
June 15, 2009: Camera ready version due to electronic form
August 29, 2009: SBM2009 Workshop
WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS AND CHAIRS
Antonio Camurri
Donald Glowinski
Maurizio Mancini
Giovanna Varni
Gualtiero Volpe
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Frederic Bevilacqua (IRCAM, France)
Roberto Bresin (KTH, Sweden)
Shuji Hashimoto (Waseda University, Japan)
Ben Knapp (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
Marc Leman (Univeristeit Ghent)
Anton Nijholt (University of Twente, NL)
Maja Pantic (Imperial College London, UK and University of Twente, NL)
Catherine Pelachaud (CNRS, France)
Isabella Poggi (Università Roma 3, Italy)
Xavier Serra (UPF, Spain)
Alessandro Vinciarelli (IDIAP, Switzerland)
The workshop is partially supported by the FP7 EU-ICT Strep Project SAME
(www.sameproject.eu).