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- research-articleJune 2019
Will the Government Machine Turn into a Monster?
dg.o '19: Proceedings of the 20th Annual International Conference on Digital Government ResearchPages 306–313https://doi.org/10.1145/3325112.3325221IT artifacts and systems increasingly act autonomously and interact non-deterministically, and we have not yet learned how to deal with this empowerment of machine agency in digital government. Following the sociomateriality discourse, this research ...
- short-paperMarch 2016
Something deep: LD33 game
GJH&GC '16: Proceedings of the International Conference on Game Jams, Hackathons, and Game Creation EventsPages 66–67https://doi.org/10.1145/2897167.2901916Game developed within 48 hours features an underwater tentacle monster. A physical model implementing the Hooke's law was built for this game. Game was #100 in Innovation, according to the LD participants' voting.
- research-articleFebruary 2014
Movie magic makes better social robots: the overlap of special effects and character robot engineering
Journal of Human-Robot Interaction (JHRI), Volume 3, Issue 1Pages 123–141https://doi.org/10.5898/JHRI.3.1.SchererThis essay provides a perspective on the ongoing convergence of social robots and special effects, animation, animatronics, puppetry techniques, and other entertainment technologies. In this paper, I will address the following design concepts:
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- research-articleJuly 2012
Construction of 2-closed M-representations
ISSAC '12: Proceedings of the 37th International Symposium on Symbolic and Algebraic ComputationPages 311–318https://doi.org/10.1145/2442829.2442874The sporadic simple group Monster, denoted by M, acts on the Griess algebra, which is a real vector space of dimension 196,884, equipped with a positive definite scalar product and a bilinear, commutative, and non-associative algebra product. Certain ...
- ArticleJune 2006
Covert emotive modality is a monster
JSAI'06: Proceedings of the 20th annual conference on New frontiers in artificial intelligencePages 191–204It has been argued that in some languages, attitude verbs shift the reference of indexicals in the embedded clauses [1, 2, 3]. I argue that not only overt attitude predicates but also implicit emotive modality is a context-shifting operator that changes ...