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)

AAAI Conferences 

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).

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