Evolutionary art SIGEVOlution 2016
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Referenz
C. Cruz; P. Hernández; L. Navarro; V. Albarrán; L. Espada: Evolutionary art. ACM SIGEVOlution Newsletter, Volume 8 Issue 3, March 2016, 2-2.
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2907964.2907965
Abstract
Evolutionary Algorithms have been frequently employed as a means for artistic creation and design, in which human artists guide the creative process, through aesthetic and conceptual evaluation, and computers are in charge of applying more repetitive genetic operations. The success of this interactive version of the evolutionary algorithm is well documented, although researchers are still struggling to find a way for properly encoding good aesthetic measures. But other possibilities exist for computer mediated artistic creation, such as applying an opposite approach: instead of allowing human beings to guide the artistic process, we could establish the main evolutionary algorithm steps as a path to be followed by human artists, such that every step is performed by his hands and brains, while the evolutionary algorithm is the framework that dictates how to progress.
Extended Abstract
Bibtex
@article{deVega:2016:EA:2907964.2907965, author = {de Vega, F. Fern\'{a}ndez and Cruz, C. and Hern\'{a}ndez, P. and Navarro, L. and Albarr\'{a}n, V. and Espada, L.}, title = {Evolutionary Art}, journal = {SIGEVOlution}, issue_date = {March 2016}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, month = mar, year = {2016}, issn = {1931-8499}, pages = {2--2}, numpages = {1}, url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2907964.2907965 http://de.evo-art.org/index.php?title=Evolutionary_art_SIGEVOlution_2016}, doi = {10.1145/2907964.2907965}, acmid = {2907965}, publisher = {ACM}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, }
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