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Dr. Shigeki AMITANI

Dr. Shigeki AMITANI
Tel: +61-(0)401-223-794
Fax: +61-(0)2-9514-4761

website :: video

Shigeki Amitani started his academic career in creativity support from his MS course at AI Laboratory, University of Tokyo, including 1 year study at Norges Teknisk-Naturvitenskapelige Universitet (NTNU). He has concentrated on the development of creativity support tools, based on microscopic analysis of human cognitive processes.

The focus in his master course was on the process of musical composition and the development of representations to support the process.

His PhD dissertation concentrated on a method and a system for supporting the process of knowledge creation in order to apply theoretical frameworks for knowledge creation to the real world design problems.

He is currently working on a project called “Our Content”. The core is a generative website with a story-generation engine that weaves video clips posted by public audiences into “stories” by combining them based on annotations so that people can enjoy dynamic contents that changes each time when they visit. The key creative question is what is the nature of the content to be made on the server, the interface that facilitates user engagement and, the overall narrative experience. We consider that generative systems are useful and effective for public audiences of video-posting websites. The target users do not necessarily have specific videos that they want to watch. Rather, they are looking for and expecting "something interesting".


While a sequence of information, such as scenario, has been regarded as a powerful tool for developing strategies and communicating contexts, few studies have been conducted for semi-automatic scenario generation for making plausible scenarios, especially out of consumer generated media. Through literature reviews in knowledge management and knowledge creation, and informal communications with people at a Japanese advertising, we identified generating sequences of information is one of the most suitable methods for stimulating human creative activities. This research opens up a new platform for both public audiences and information designers.

The contribution to the broader community of the research field is that this work provides an empirical proof of the concept "a computer as a stimulant" (Edmonds 2000). Humans naturally share knowledge by telling stories, sequences of information. This is a form of knowledge exchange and of organising our experiences (Garvey 1977). This is one concrete example that shows how sequences of information, usually referred as scenarios, storytelling, contexts, etc., could be stimulants for human creative activities. 

 

publications and more details: <a xhref="http://shigekifactory.com" target="_blank">http://shigekifactory.com</a>

 

 



CCS Hub

  Prof. Ernest Edmonds
University of Technology, Sydney

Director
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  Ian Gwilt
University of Technology, Sydney

Co-Director

  Mike Leggett
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
  Dr. Yusuf Pisan
University of Technology, Sydney

Co-Director

website :: blog
  Dr. Shigeki AMITANI
University of Technology, Sydney

Senior Research Assistant
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website
  Dr. Zafer Bilda
University of Technology Sydney

Research Associate
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website
  Chris Bowman
University of Technology, Sydney

Lecturer, Visual Communication
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  Jane Brennan
University of Technology, Sydney



  Julia Burns
UTS

Masters student

website
  Dave Burraston
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
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  Brigid Costello
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
blog
  Roman Danylak
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student (submitted)
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  Jeremy Epstein
UTS

Honours Student

website
  John S Gero
Krasnow Institute

Adjunct Professor

website
  Tina Gonsalves
UTS

PhD Student, Artist

website
  Mohd Hazali Mohamed Halip
National University of Malaysia

Ph.D. Student

  Damian Hills
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student

website
  Andrew Johnston
University of Technology, Sydney

Lecturer & Ph.D. Student
 :: video
website :: blog
  Andrew Martin
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student

  Sarah Moss
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
website
  Lizzie Muller
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
website
  Yukari Nagai
Japan Advanced Institute of Science

Ph.D. Student

  Julien Phalip
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
blog
  Jen Seevinck
University of Technology

Ph.D. Student
 :: video
website :: blog
  Dr. Greg Turner
University of Technology, Sydney

Visiting Scholar
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website :: blog
  Jerry Watkins
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student

  Dr. Alastair Weakley
University of Technology, Sydney

Senior Research Assistant
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  Viveka Weiley
University of Technology, Sydney

Research Student

website :: blog
  Yun Zhang
University of Technology, Sydney

Ph.D. Student
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blog

CCS Partners

  Dr. Linda Candy
University of Technology, Sydney



website :: blog
  Prof. Nigel Cross
Editor of Design Studies, OU, UK


  Prof. Ross Gibson



  Prof. Tom Hewett
Psychology and Computer Science,


  Dr. Roger Malina
Editor of Leonardo, France


  Dr. Eduardo Miranda
University of Plymouth, UK


  Prof. Kumiyo Nakakoji
RCAST, University of Tokyo


  Dr. Ted Selker
MIT Media Lab, USA


  Dr. Christa Sommerer
IAMAS, Japan


  Stelarc
Australia


  Prof Sue Thomas
De Montfort University



website


CCS Associates

  Kirsty Beilharz
University of Sydney

Senior Lecturer, Composer

website
  Rod Berry
Advanced Telecommunications Resear

Associate

  Sebastian Chan
Powerhouse Museum

Manager, Web Services

website :: blog
  Joanne Jakovich
University of Sydney

Ph.D. Student

  Stephen Jones

Artist

  George Khut

Artist

  Dr. Tim Mansfield
The Woodfield Institute

Principal Researcher

  Ben Marks

Musician
  Dr. Yuji Sone
UNSW

Vice-Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellow

  Deborah Turnbull
Powerhouse Museum and UTS

Beta_space Curator

website :: blog
  Jim Underwood
University of Technology, Sydney

IS academic

website
  Danielle Wilde
Monash University, CSIRO TFT

artist researcher

website :: blog