Arts, Humanities, and Complex Networks
— 6th Leonardo satellite symposium at NetSci2015
taking place at the World Trade Center Zaragoza (WTCZ) in Spain,
on Tuesday, June 2, 2015.
Submission:
For submission instructions please go to:
http://artshumanities.netsci2015.net/
Deadline for submission:
March 29, 2015.
Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by April 6, 2015.
Abstract:
For the sixth time, it is our pleasure to bring
together pioneer work in the overlap of arts, humanities,
network research, data science, and information design. The 2015
symposium will again follow our established recipe, leveraging
interaction between those areas by means of keynotes, a number
of contributions, and a high-profile panel discussion.
In our call, we are looking for a diversity of research
contributions revolving around networks in culture, networks in
art, networks in the humanities, art about networks, and
research in network visualization. Focussing on these five
pillars that have crystallized out of our previous meetings, the
2015 symposium again strives to make further impact in the arts,
humanities, and natural sciences.
Running parallel to the
NetSci2015 conference,
the symposium provides a unique opportunity to mingle with
leading researchers in complex network science, potentially
sparking fruitful collaborations.
As in previous years, selected papers will be published in
print, both in a Special Section of Leonardo Journal MIT-Press
and in a dedicated Leonardo eBook MIT-Press (see below). - See
more at:
http://ahcn2015.schich.info/#sthash.ur1o5Lba.dpuf
For the sixth time, it is our pleasure to bring together pioneer
work in the overlap of arts, humanities, network research, data
science, and information design. The 2015 symposium will again
follow our established recipe, leveraging interaction between
those areas by means of keynotes, a number of contributions, and a
high-profile panel discussion. In our call, we are looking for a
diversity of research contributions revolving around networks in
culture, networks in art, networks in the humanities, art about
networks, and research in network visualization. Focusing on these
five pillars that have crystallized out of our previous meetings,
the 2015 symposium again strives to make further impact in the
arts, humanities, and natural sciences. Running parallel to the
NetSci2015 conference, the symposium provides a unique opportunity
to mingle with leading researchers in complex network science,
potentially sparking fruitful collaborations. As in previous
years, selected papers will be published in print, both in a
Special Section of
Leonardo Journal and in a dedicated
Leonardo
eBook MIT-Press:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007S0UA9Q
Keynote:
As in previous years, we will feature a high-profile keynote from
the areas of cultural data science, network visualization, and/or
network art.
Best regards,
The AHCN2015 organizers,
Maximilian Schich*, Roger Malina**, and Isabel Meirelles***
artshumani...@gmail.com
* Associate Professor, ATEC, The University of Texas at Dallas,
USA
** Executive Editor at Leonardo Publications, France/USA
*** Professor, Professor, Faculty of Design, OCAD University,
Toronto, Canada