[spectre] CFP: International Conference on Live Coding

alex alex at slab.org
Tue Nov 18 21:05:35 CET 2014


Call for papers and performances:
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.

Please email feedback and/or questions to livecodenet at gmail.com

http://www.livecodenetwork.org/iclc2015/



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