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6th International Conference on Movement and Computing (MOCO19)
https://moco19.movementcomputing.org/
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10-12th October,  Tempe, Arizona
Arizona State University, USA

Arizona State University [ASU] will host the 2019 the 6th International 
Conference on Movement and Computing [MOCO] which is to be held in Tempe, 
Arizona. 

The MOCO 2019 theme will be Movement Imaginaries. Paper presentations, panels, 
performances, demos, workshops on all MOCO-related topics are welcome. MOCO is 
an interdisciplinary conference that explores the use of computational 
technology to support and understand human movement practice, as well as 
movement as a means of interacting with computers. We welcome submissions with 
an interdisciplinary understanding of movement that ranges from biomechanics to 
embodied cognition and the phenomenology of bodily experience and identities. 
We therefore invite submissions from a wide range of disciplines including, but 
not limited to: Human-Computer Interaction, Psychology, Dance, Artificial 
Intelligence, Neuroscience, Sports Science, Machine Learning, Cognitive 
Science, Visual Arts, Robotics, Philosophy, Anthropology, Music, Affective 
Computing, Games, Healthcare and Animation.

All proposal abstracts for roundtables, panel sessions, contributed papers, and 
posters must be submitted by Wednesday, February 27, 2019 (midnight EDT). See 
Submissions  for more information and the full CFP.

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Important Dates
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NB There will be no deadline extensions

Submission deadline:       27 February 2019
Notification:                      23 May 2019
Camera ready papers:     30 June 2019


ABOUT
https://moco19.movementcomputing.org
https://www.movementcomputing.org/past-conferences/

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Submission
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We would like to invite submissions for paper presentations, performances, 
workshops and more to the 6th International Conference on Movement and 
Computing (MOCO) which is to be held in Tempe, Arizona.

MOCO is open to a wide range of ways of presenting your work. As well as papers 
for oral and poster presentations, we invite submission of a wide range of 
practice work such as demos, performances, games, artistic works and movement 
workshops (in which participants take part in a guided movement activity). We 
encourage submitters to be creative in proposals for practice sessions and are 
open to novel formats.

This requires a wide range of computational tasks including modeling, 
representation, segmentation, recognition, classification, or generation of 
movement information but also an interdisciplinary understanding of movement 
that ranges from biomechanics to embodied cognition and the phenomenology of 
bodily experience. We therefore invite submissions from a wide range of 
disciplines including (but not limited to): Human-Computer Interaction, 
Psychology, Dance, Artificial Intelligence, Neuroscience, Sports Science, 
Machine Learning, Cognitive Science, Visual Arts, Robotics, Philosophy, 
Anthropology, Music, Affective Computing, Games, Healthcare and Animation.

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Suggested Topics
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  •  Expressive movement-based interaction
  •  Movement analysis and analytics

  •  Machine learning for movement

  •  Movement representation

  •  Somatic practice and design

  •  Modeling movement qualities and expressive movement

  •  Mechatronics and creative robotics

  •  Design for movement in digital art

  •  Gesture Interaction

  •  Movement generation

  •  Movement and sound interaction

  •  Movement computation in ergonomics, sports, and health

  •  Sensory-motor learning with audio/visual feedback

  •  Embodied cognition and movement

  •  Visualizing and sonifying movement

  •  Modeling kinaesthetic empathy

  •  Embodied and whole body interaction

  •  Expressive movement analysis and synthesis

  •  Design for movement in digital art

  •  Semantic models for movement representation

  •  Movement Notation Systems (e.g. Laban or Eshkol-Wachman) and computation

  •  Dance and technology

  •  Biosensing, biocontrol and movement

  •  Movement expression in avatar, artificial agents, virtual humans or robots.

  •  Music and movement

  •  Philosophical perspectives and reflection on movement and computing


The conference is an opportunity to present a research or study or details of 
collaborative work. Participants will have the opportunity to offer a 
presentation of the results of their research on one of the themes of the 
symposium and to interact with their scientific/ artistic peers, in a friendly 
and constructive environment. We encourage submission of a wide range of 
formats, the submission categories are:

    Long paper with oral presentation (8 pages maximum)


    Short paper with oral presentation (4 pages maximum)


    Extended abstract with poster presentation (6 pages maximum in the extended 
abstract format)


All submissions should be in pdf format and should use the ACM proceedings 
format: http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template

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Tracks
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MOCO is open to a wide range of ways of presenting your work. Besides papers 
for oral and poster presentation, we invite submission of practice works such 
as demos, performances, games, artistic works and movement workshops (in which 
participants take part in a guided movement activity).

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Papers and Posters
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The conference is an opportunity to present original research and details of 
collaborative work. Participants will have the opportunity to offer a 
presentation of the results of their research on one of the themes of the 
conference and to interact with their scientific/artistic peers, in a friendly 
and constructive environment. We encourage submission of a wide range of 
formats. 

Authors of papers and posters may submit an accompanying demonstration proposal 
in addition to their regular paper or poster submission, by completing the 
proposal form for practice works (see items 2 and 3 in the next section) and 
sending it along with their submission. Together with the form, authors have to 
provide a link to a video about their work. The proposal form for practice 
works is mandatory for all paper and poster submissions including an 
accompanying demonstration and must include details about technical set-up and 
space requirements. 
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Practice Works
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We deliberately use a very open term – “practice work” – to encourage diverse 
ideas of what practice in movement and computing is and how such practice can 
be presented. We suggest the following as examples of what a practice work 
might be, but also stress that the list is not exhaustive and any types of 
presentation can be considered, the only criteria being excellence of the work 
and whether it is possible to stage the work given the resources, time and 
space available to the conference. 

Suggested practice works topics:
* Technology demos
* Performances (e.g., dance, physical performance, music)
* Artworks
* Interactive Installations
* Movement workshops (i.e., a session in which participants engage in movement 
based activity)
* Games
* Video presentations

Submissions consist of: 
1. An extended abstract (2 pages maximum).
2. The proposal form for practice work, including detailed technical 
requirements and possible additional information. The form is available here 
(Ms Excel format) or here (OpenOffice format).
3. Supporting media (videos, pictures, audio, and so on), which should provide 
an overview of the practical work and details of the practical and technical 
requirements for putting the work on (this is very important to ensure that we 
can accommodate the work within the resources of our conference).

Extended abstract for practice work with presentation format to be suggested by 
the author for example demonstration, performance, art work, movement workshop, 
game or other practice presentation (2 pages maximum + Demo proposal form).  
Please note that we are an academic conference with a low fee which means we 
cannot pay for commissioned performances and art work. Also, we cannot 
guarantee facilities for all possible sessions, so please give full details of 
your needs in the proposal form so we can judge whether it is possible. 

Submissions will be by extended abstract (2 pages maximum) and a proposal form 
which will give details of the practical requirements for putting on the work 
(this is very important to ensure that we can accommodate the work within the 
resources of our conference).

Please note that we are an academic conference with a low fee which means we 
cannot pay for commissioned performances and art work. Also, we cannot 
guarantee facilities for all possible sessions, so please give full details of 
your needs in the proposal form so we can judge whether it is possible.

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Doctoral Consortium
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Doctoral papers are an opportunity for PhD students to present their work in 
progress on their doctorate, share and develop their research ideas in a 
supportive environment and with the participation of experts in the field. 
Students will have the opportunity to establish a community, together with 
other doctoral students at a similar stage of their research. Accepted papers 
will have an oral presentation in a dedicated session. We encourage students to 
submit a paper even if they are early in their doctoral work.

Papers should not be longer than 4 pages including the references. The first 
author must be an actual PhD student. Doctoral Consortium papers will be 
indexed and published in the ACM digital library. Videos and other 
supplementary materials are highly welcomed. Students accepted to present their 
work at the Doctoral Consortium must plan to attend it.
Submission Format and Procedure
All submissions must be written in English. Submissions must be in pdf format 
and they have to be prepared using the ACM proceedings template: 
http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template 

All contributions must be submitted online through EasyChair: 
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=moco2019

All submissions must be anonymous and will be peer-reviewed. The MOCO 
proceedings will be indexed and published in the ACM digital library.  

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CONFERENCE LOCATION
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ASU is a massive Research One university, giving the conference access to a 
great diversity of programs, practices, and scholars working here. MOCO at ASU 
presents a unique opportunity to build upon existing fields of interests and 
forge new avenues for research and knowledge creation that resonate across the 
arts and sciences and branch into health, philosophy, education and other 
application areas that include both computational techniques and human 
movement. The range of interdisciplinary labs and centers and the beautiful 
October weather make this an ideal locale for the conference. ASU is located 
about fifteen minutes from the Phoenix Airport. 

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Contact
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If you have any questions please contact:

moco2...@easychair.org
or
Grisha Coleman

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Committee
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        • Conference Chair: Grisha Coleman (ASU)
        • Scientific Chairs: Sofia Dahl & Cumhur Erkut (Aalborg University)
        • Performance & Practice Chair: Christian Ziegler (ASU)
        • Doctoral Symposium Chair: Garett Laroy Johnson (ASU)
        • Local Organizers: Kimberlee Swisher, Stacey Moran, Julie Ackerly, 
Jessica Raijko, Adam Nocek, Pavan Turaga
        • Steering Committee: Frédéric Bevilacqua (IRCAM), Sarah Fdili Alaoui 
(LRI-Université Paris-Sud 11), Jules Françoise (CNRS, Université Paris-Sud 
Université Paris-Saclay), Philippe Pasquier (Simon Fraser University), Thecla 
Schiphorst (Simon Fraser University)

-- 
http://movementcomputing.org/
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