MCM: Mathematics and Computation in Music

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Past:   Proceedings on DBLP

Future:  Post a CFP for 2016 or later   |   Invite the Organizers Email

 
 

All CFPs on WikiCFP

Event When Where Deadline
MCM 2015 Mathematics and Computation in Music
Jun 22, 2015 - Jun 25, 2015 London, UK Jan 9, 2015
 
 

Present CFP : 2015

The organizers of MCM 2015 encourage submissions of unpublished papers that use Mathematical and/or computational approaches to music theory, music analysis, composition, or performance, by researchers or teams of researchers from any relevant field.

Particularly, we welcome submissions on any topic relating to mathematics and/or computation and music, including (but not limited to):

Mathematical and computational models of and/or approaches to
musicology, music theory and analysis, composition
musical performance and improvisation
the perception and cognition of any aspect of musical structure
music and emotion
musical learning and education
musical interaction and gestures
Logical, philosophical and methodological aspects of mathematics and computation in music
The history of mathematics and computation in music
Applications of mathematical music theory and computational tools for musicians, musicologists and others who work with music
We invite submissions of the following types:

Long papers (10-12 pages in the Springer LNCS style) to be presented orally
Short papers (4-6 pages in the Springer LNCS style) to be presented as posters
Panel discussions
Workshops and tutorials
Long and short papers

Long and short paper submissions should take the form of complete papers, each paper submission should include an abstract of up to 150 words. As the review process will be double blind, authors must take care not to reveal their identities in any way in their paper submissions.

Accepted papers will be published by Springer in an edited volume in the series Lecture Notes in Computer Science, as were the proceedings of previous MCM conferences. Information for authors in this series may be found here, including formatting guidelines. Submissions must be made using one of the Springer LNCS style templates. Authors are strongly encouraged to prepare their submissions using the LNCS LaTeX style (see also this sample file). However, if authors are unable to use LaTeX, then templates are also available for Word-2007 and Word-2003. A correctly formatted document for Word for Mac, that you can use as a sample, replacing its text with your own, may be found here. Submissions that do not conform to one of these templates will be rejected without review.

All papers will be reviewed according to their novelty, scientific quality, relevance to the conference and stimulation potential. A long paper submission might be accepted as a short paper in the review process, if it is considered more appropriate for poster presentation. In such cases, authors will be required to submit final versions of their papers that comply with the 4-6 page limit for short papers.

A researcher may not appear as single author on more than one paper submission, nor as a lead author on more than two paper submissions.

Panel discussions

Panels should offer lively and provocative discussions on topics of particular interest to the community. Rather than offering a series of paper presentations, panel sessions should be structured so as to engage the audience in thoughtful and constructive dialogue with the panelists. The primary criteria for selection are the anticipated level of interest, the potential impact, and the organizer’s and panelists’ expertise in the field.

Proposals should be no more than 4000 words and need not follow the Springer formatting procedures. A proposal for a panel discussion should provide the following details:

clear description of the topic of the discussion
arguments why the topic is timely, significant and relevant to the conference
references to relevant recent publications
short biographies for the proposed discussants.
Workshops and tutorials

Workshops and tutorials are dedicated to, preferably, interdisciplinary themes that are covered by any of the topics relevant to the conference. Workshops should allow conference participants to engage actively in the session. Tutorials should also, preferably, allow for audience participation, but will generally provide in-depth introductions to particular topics. The primary criteria for selection are the anticipated level of interest, the potential impact, and the presenters’ expertise in the field.

Proposals for workshops and tutorials should be no longer than 3000 words and need not follow the Springer formatting procedures. A proposal for a workshop or tutorial should provide the following details:

an outline of the workshop/tutorial topic
brief review of recent research relevant to the topic
the intended and expected audience
short biography of the presenter(s), and
any special requirements.
The deadline for all types of submission is: Friday 9 January 2015.

Notification acceptance: 6 March 2015

Camera-ready copy: 22 March 2015

All submissions must be made through the conference EasyChair site. At least one author for each paper will need to have an EasyChair account in order to make a submission. A new EasyChair account can be made here.
 

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