Hi MCN'ers,

I wanted to pass along some information about what looks to be a pretty
interesting conference hosted by the European Science Foundation this fall
for your interest:

ESF-COST High-Level Research Conference
Networked Humanities: Art History in the Web
9-14 October 2010
Acquafredda di Maratea, Italy

Conference Link: http://www.esf.org/index.php?id=6726
Draft Program:
http://www.esf.org/activities/esf-conferences/details/2010/confdetail342/342-preliminary-programme.html

Since the earliest times, new technologies have contributed to profound
scientific advances and have transformed the ways we can do research. It is
claimed today that the World Wide Web offers revolutionary models of
scientific cooperation, which promise to instantiate a utopian democracy of
knowledge. This claim has repeatedly been associated with the development
and introduction of a collaborative Web, commonly referred to as 'Web 2.0'
as well as its offspring, a semantically enriched Web 3.0 still in the
making The aim of this conference is to bring together art historians and
other researchers (including digital humanists) in order to investigate the
intersection between the web and collaborative research processes, via an
examination of electronic media-based cooperative models in the history of
art and beyond.

The conference will not only be an occasion to exchange ideas and present
relevant projects in the field, but,with contributions spanning from art
history (and digital art) to philosophy and cultural studies, from
psychology and sociology of knowledge to computer graphics, from semiotics
to curatorial practices it will offer a unique forum for the representation
of both diversified and complementary approaches to the topic of Networked
humanities.

Conference format:

   - lectures by invited high level speakers
   - short talks by young & early stage researchers
   - poster sessions, round table and open discussion periods
   - forward look panel discussion about future developments

Invited speakers will include:

   - *Ira Assent* (Aaalborg University, DK)
   *Data Mining and the Social Web*
   - *Erik Champion* (Massey University Auckland, NZ)
   *Game-Based Learning in Collaborative Virtual Worlds*
   - *Patrick Danowski* (CERN Geneva, CH)
   *"Collaborative filtering" and Social Networks*
   - *Matteo d'Alfonso* (Universit? di Bologna, IT)
   *Linked Data & Semantic Web technologies for the Humanities*
   - *Francesca Gallo* (University of Rome "La Sapienza", IT)
   *From local networks to the web: Artistic research after Les Immat?riaux*
   - *Charlie Gere* (University of Lancaster, UK)
   *Touch, community and the digital*
   - *Gudrun Germann* (German Historical Institute Paris, FR)
   *Networked publication*
   - *Guenther Goerz* (University of Erlangen, Institute of Computer
   Science, DE)
   *A framework for semantic object representation, knowledge processing,
   and scholarly communication*
   - *Halina Gottlieb* (Interactive Institute, Kista, SE)
   *Designing support activities for the interdiscplinary collaboration in
   Digital Art History*
   - *Gerhard Nauta* (University of Leiden, NL)
   *Do you see what we've seen? Using many eyes in search of similarities in
   the visual arts*
   - *Robert Stein* (Indianapolis Museum of Arts, US)
   *Crowd-Sourcing Art History: Research and Application of Social Tagging
   for Museums*

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