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Workshop 1: “Permission to play: Exploring Art with Games”
Description
The workshop will cover games as a technique for understanding parts of the art market. Students will learn how key aspects of the art market can be represented as a game and what insights can be gained from doing so.
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Speakers
Mr. Gabriel Getzie & Dr. Monica Lee Steinberg
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Date
May 24 (2:00 – 2:45 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.41, Centennial Campus
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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Workshop 2: “Live from the Field: Digital Methods at an Archaeological Site in Armenia”
Description
In this session, students will have a valuable chance to join Dr. Peter Cobb to a virtual tour at an archaeological site in Armenia and learn how digital technologies could help in the field of archaeology. JUPAS applicants who are interested in Bachelor of Arts in Humanities and Digital Technologies are strongly encouraged to attend this event.
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Speaker
Dr. Peter Cobb
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Date
May 24 (2:00 – 2:45 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.29, Centennial Campus (Live Broadcast)
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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Workshop 3: “Graph Thinking in the Humanities: From Character Networks to Genealogies”
Description
This mini-workshop will introduce the applications of graph theory and network analysis tools in humanities scholarship. Demonstrations will include the Les Misérables character co-occurrence networks, the Hollywood movies graph database, and the oldest extant Korean family genealogy.
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Speaker
Dr. Javier Cha
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Date
May 24 (2:45 – 3:30 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.41, Centennial Campus
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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Workshop 4: “Interactive Storytelling: Creating Digital StoryMaps”
Description
This workshop shows how we can use online tools (such as StoryMapJS or Esri StoryMaps) to create interactive digital stories that combine text, images, and maps. Students can learn how to use storytelling techniques to explain historical events in an engaging way.
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Speaker
Dr. Anya Adair
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Date
May 24 (2:45 – 3:30 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.29, Centennial Campus
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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Workshop 5: “Creating your story with ChatGPT: what to ask the AI and how to ask it?”
Description
In this workshop, we will discover how one of the latest and most powerful “large language models” – ChatGPT – can create short stories. You will choose the theme, elements and style of these stories, and we will experiment with increasingly sophisticated requests to get better and more specific outputs. We will assess what ChatGPT can come up with, discuss its limits, and reflect more broadly upon the meaning of literary creativity.
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Speaker
Dr. Christophe Coupé
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Date
May 24 (3:30 – 4:15 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.41, Centennial Campus
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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Workshop 6: “Deepfakes or (Co-)Creativities?: Music, AI, and Digital Media”
Description
From a recently staged tech-cantata to the international AI Song Contest, this workshop identifies emerging trends, transformative practices, and critical issues at the intersection of music, digital media, and artificial intelligence. How can centuries-old tradition and new technology come together to enable new art forms? What creative, technical, and ethical challenges may arise when human artists and AI systems attempt to “co-write” a song?
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Speakers
Prof. Giorgio Biancorosso & Dr. Rujing Stacy Huang
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Date
May 24 (3:30 – 4:15 pm)
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Venue
CPD-3.29, Centennial Campus
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Registration
Here (Deadline: May 19)
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