Dear Frameworkers,

I would like to bring your attention to a Call for Papers for a symposium I
am involved in organizing as part of the research project The Sensory
Moving Image Archive at the University of Amsterdam.
It is a symposium on visualization and exploration of moving image data
which aims to bring many different groups and practitioners together to
discuss - scholars, computer scientists, archivists and artists. Please see
below for more info or read more about the research project here:

http://sensorymovingimagearchive.humanities.uva.nl

I hope to see some of you there!

Best,

Christian Olesen

==========


*CfP: Sensory Moving Image Archives – Visualization, Exploration and Reuse
of Moving Image Data*

*Date: *25-26 February, 2019

*Location: *Doelenzaal, University Library, University of Amsterdam, Singel
425.

*Registration: *Entrance is free but seats are limited, so please register
by emailing c.g.olesen_at_ uva.nl.

The international two-day symposium *Sensory Moving Image Archives:
Visualization, Exploration and Reuse of Moving Image Data* comes out of the
research project *The**Sensory Moving Image Archive: Boosting Creative
Reuse for Artistic Practice and Research (*SEMIA, 2017-2019*)*. Working
with diverse archival material from Eye Filmmuseum and the Netherlands
Institute for Sound and Vision, SEMIA develops alternative ways of
exploring moving image archives by analyzing data concerning visual
features – such as colour, movement and shape. To achieve this, SEMIA has
trained deep-learning networks for extracting sensory data from moving
images and developed an interface for exploring the results. The project’s
outcomes will support alternative ways of accessing collections and
facilitate new forms of reuse based on sensory data.

In pursuing these goals, the project seeks to challenge the limitations of
traditional text-based search. In recent years, three groups in particular
have expressed a need for this – and it is these groups the symposium
targets – namely: *scholars and scientists* – including media historians,
museum and archival scholars, digital humanities scholars and computer
scientists; *artists* working with moving image or cultural heritage
collections; and *archivists* – including media archivists and cultural
heritage professionals more broadly. Taking SEMIA’s results as its starting
point and test case, the symposium offers a platform for exchange between
perspectives from those different groups, and the fields they represent.
The program will consist of invited presentations and papers accepted
through an open call. Scholars, professionals and practitioners from all
groups are strongly encouraged to submit proposals.

*The programme committee for the symposium invites contributions in the
following areas (but will also consider other relevant topics):*

*Media Historiography and Digital Humanities*

   - Data-driven visual methodologies for the analysis of visual culture
   (Rose 2013), in different areas of the humanities
   - Examples of the exploration of moving image and cultural heritage
   data, for instance in the lineage of  Exploratory Data Analysis (Tukey
   1977) or Cultural Analytics (Manovich 2009)
   - Approaches in film studies engaging with data visualization as a form
   of  deformative criticism (Ferguson 2017) or new cinephilia (Habib, 2015)

*Heritage Studies*

   - Interfaces for heritage collections that challenge text-based search
   and retrieval, for instance “generous” interfaces (Whitelaw 2015) or forms
   of humanistic interface design (Drucker 2013)
   - Processes for and experiences in designing exploratory interfaces for
   heritage collections, specifically prototyping and user testing

*Computer Science*

   - Deep-learning and/or feature engineering for visual analysis of moving
   images
   - Computer science approaches tailored to the analysis of subjective
   attribute data (rather than object recognition or scenes)

*Media Art*

   - Media art projects and practice-based research exploring the
   affordances of non-evidentiary algorithmic approaches to moving image data
   analysis and visualization
   - Practices of found footage, expanded cinema and moving image archive
   appropriation involving data analysis and visualization

*Media Archiving*

   - The integration of computer-generated (sensory) moving image data in
   media asset management systems and/or moving image archive databases
   - Reuse of (sensory) moving image data for TV production and in
   journalism

*Submission guidelines:*

Please submit an abstract of 300 words and a short bio of 50 words, in pdf
format, by emailing c.g.olesen_at_uva.nl before 23 November.
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