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Computer
technology is leading to sweeping changes in how we can reason about groups
in diverse cultures. Examples include computer systems to aid researchers in
gathering data about different cultural groups, learning the intensity of
opinions that those groups have on various topics, building/extracting models
of behavior of those groups, and continuously refining those behaviors
through shared, multi-person, learning experiences. These
developments are inherently cross-disciplinary. They blend the behavioral and
social sciences—fields such as political science, psychology,
journalism, anthropology, and sociology—with technological fields such
as computer science, computational linguistics, game theory, and operations
research. Currently,
many of these research communities are largely unconnected. There is a need
to bring them together to help forge a common understanding of principles,
techniques, and application areas. That is the purpose of this conference.
The First International Conference on Computational Cultural Dynamics was
held in August 2007 and was sponsored by the American Association for
Artificial Intelligence who published the proceedings. A special issue of
selected papers from the conference will be published by IEEE Intelligent
Systems journal in 2009. Papers are
solicited on computational models for cultural dynamics, and also on
applications where such models may be expected to be useful in enhancing
cultural sensitivity. Examples of the latter are (but are not restricted to):
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This conference is sponsored by the University of Maryland Institute for
Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS), Air
Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), Association for the Advancement of
Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), and the Laboratory for Computational
Cultural Dynamics (LCCD).
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