A Cultural Computing Approach to Interactive Narrative: The Case of the Living Liberia Fabric
Harrell, D. Fox (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) | Gonzalez, Chris (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Blumenthal, Hank (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Chenzira, Ayoka (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Powell, Natasha (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Piazza, Nathan (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Best, Michael (Georgia Institute of Technology)
This position paper presents an approach to computational narrative based in cognitive linguistics and sociolinguistics accounts of conceptual blending, metaphor, and narrative, multimedia semantics, human-centered interface design, and digital media art practice. In particular, as a case study, we describe the Living Liberia Fabric, an AI-based interactive narrative system developed in affiliation with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Liberia to memorialize a fourteen-year civil war. The Living Liberia Fabric project is led by Fox Harrell and executed in the Imagination, Computation, and Expression (ICE) Laboratory at Georgia Tech. The system exemplifies a cultural computing approach (grounding computing practices in a wider range of specific cultural traditions and values than those that are privileged in computer science).
Nov-5-2010
- Country:
- Africa > Liberia (1.00)
- Europe (1.00)
- North America > United States
- California (0.29)
- Massachusetts > Middlesex County (0.14)
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