Technical University of Copenhagen
Workshops Held at the Ninth Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment (AIIDE): A Report
Liapis, Antonios (Technical University of Copenhagen) | Cook, Michael (Goldsmiths College London) | Smith, Adam M. (University of Washington) | Smith, Gillian (Northeastern University) | Zook, Alexander (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Si, Mei (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Cavazza, Marc (Teesside University) | Pasquier, Philippe (Simon Fraser University)
The Ninth Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment (AIIDE) was held October 14–18, 2013, at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. Workshops were held on the two days prior to the start of the main conference, giving attendees a chance to hold in-depth discussions on topics that complement the themes of the main conference program. This year the workshops included the First Workshop on AI and Game Aesthetics (1 day), The Second Workshop on AI in the Game Design Process (1 day), The Second International Workshop on Musical Metacreation (2 day), The Sixth Workshop on Intelligent Narrative Technologies (2 day).
Workshops Held at the Ninth Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment (AIIDE): A Report
Liapis, Antonios (Technical University of Copenhagen) | Cook, Michael (Goldsmiths College London) | Smith, Adam M. (University of Washington) | Smith, Gillian (Northeastern University) | Zook, Alexander (Georgia Institute of Technology) | Si, Mei (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Cavazza, Marc (Teesside University) | Pasquier, Philippe (Simon Fraser University)
The workshop was accompanied by an evening Games are unique in that their components event, DAGGER, which drew together local game developers (from the rules and goals of the game to the appearance and academic research projects. Acting both of avatars and their dialogue) must encompass as an exhibition and as an informal gathering, the both functional and aesthetic prerequisites. Artificial DAGGER event allowed attendees to interact directly intelligence usually focuses on the functional quality with a wide variety of game types and technologies, of such game components, for example, ensuring as well as with their developers. As events such that an avatar can traverse a level in minimal time or as DAGGER help bridge the gap between theoretical that AI can win over any human in a strategy game. The papers avatar, or level would appeal to a particular player. of the workshop were published as AAAI Technical The Workshop on AI and Game Aesthetics provided Report WS-13-19.