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Archive of posts filed under the CFP category.

Open Call: DIGITAL’2010: PLANET EARTH

DIGITAL’2010:  PLANET EARTH 12th international digital print competition-exhibition organized by Art & Science Collaborations, Inc. (ASCI) to be held at the New York Hall of Science Oct.3, 2010 – January 31, 2011 DEADLINE: Aug.16, 2010 Click here for the GUIDELINES <http://www.asci.org/artikel1106.html> with links to: Co-Juror Bios, Online Entry Form, Payment Page] INTRODUCTION Our blue planet, [...]

CFP: The first International Conference on Transdisciplinary Imaging at the Intersections between Art, Science and Culture

“New Imaging: transdisciplinary strategies for art beyond the new media”. Takes place on 5 – 6  November at Artspace, 43/51 Cowper Wharf Rd, Sydney, NSW 2011. Deadline for Abstracts:  June 25,  2010 A profound shift is occurring in our understanding of postmodern media culture. Since the turn of the millennium the emphasis on mediation as [...]

CFP: STS Approaches to Neuroscience Objects and Practices

DEADLINE MONDAY 15th MARCH   |   EASST conference in Trento Abstracts of no more than 500 words should be sent by email (following website instructions) by 2010 March 15th: http://events.unitn.it/en/easst010/abstract-submission

CFP: ICCC-X : 1st International Conference on Computational Creativity

Lisbon, Portugal, 7-9   |   January 2010 http://creative-systems.dei.uc.pt/icccx DEADLINE: September 21, 2009

CFP: “Loving the Machine: Human-Machine Relationships in Film and Television”

In the last century, the long-running discourse of human-machine relations extended to film and television depictions of struggles for power, intimacy, identity, or security. Potential social conflicts engendered by producing machines that operate in their own self-interest have been explored in films such as

CFP: The Neuroscientific Turn in the Humanities and Social Sciences

Below the break is a call for essays for an edited collection that analyzes and interrogates the recent neuroscientific turn in the humanities and social sciences. The editors are particularly interested to hear from researchers who apply the neuro- to their own disciplinary work.