Mason Dixon on Mon, 14 Sep 2009 18:38:15 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime-ann> RFP: Funding Opportunities from the National Science Foundation CreativeIT Program |
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Funding Opportunities from the National Science Foundation CreativeIT Program http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=501096&org=CISE&from=home DUE DATE Full Proposal Deadline Date: October 13, 2009 I. INTRODUCTIONCreativity, design, and research all contribute new knowledge and artifacts. The CreativeIT program focuses on the commonality of these three processes and solicits proposals that bring creative practice and creativity research to play a role in transformative research in specific contexts of computer science, cognitive science, information technology, education, engineering design and science. The program considers design as a type of research inwhich the definition of the problem may change in response to theexploration and development of alternative solutions, leading to creativesolutions and innovation. The program's objective is to bring togetherdifferent disciplines associated with creative and scientific advances in away that is mutually beneficial. This program encourages new ways of thinking about one discipline in terms of another, so that theinterdisciplinary nature of the project is a means to an end rather than anend in itself. II. PROGRAM DESCRIPTION Information technology is playing an increasing role in extending thecapability of human creative thinking and problem solving, and conversely, creative uses of information technology are leading to new areas of research and innovation. Creativity is often the result of a design process in which the exploration of possible designs changes our perspective on what thedesign can or should achieve. A designer develops new artifacts in thecontext of a perceived need or problem specification. In creative design, the reflection on problem finding becomes as important as problem solving. The combination of creativity and design thinking in information technology, science, and engineering has the potential to define new areas and lead to increased successful innovation. *Advances:* CreativeIT seeks proposals forprojects whose objectives are new models of creativity, new models for research and education, or creativity enhancing tools developed in the context of a specific discipline.*Research Areas: *The following research areas elaborate on these potential types of advances as guidelines for describing how the objectives of theproject contribute to CreativeIT.1. *Understanding Creative Cognition and Computation. *Research in this area develops or applies cognitive models that serve as inspiration forcomputational models of creativity, support for human creativity, orapproaches for educating people to be more creative. This research is typically done by adopting or adapting a model of cognition and evaluating its creative performance in different contexts, or developing a new model of creativity based on empirical or ethnographic studies. The emphasis in this area is the development of new models of cognition and computation that explain or simulate creativity and how these models open up new researchareas in computing and cognitive science.2. *Creativity to Stimulate Breakthroughs in Science and Engineering. *Thisarea considers the role and performance of creative professionals indeveloping new technologies, discovering new patterns in information, and in finding new ways of seeing, knowing, and doing computing, science and engineering. This area seeks to foster research that is conducted with groups of people from different backgrounds in which the creative synergy is focused on a specific context, problem, or perceived need. The result of this research is a new product, new model, or new area of research. The evaluation of the results of this kind of research does not follow directly from existing metrics or performance criteria and therefore may need toredefine relevant performance criteria. 3. *Educational Approaches that Encourage Creativity.* This area considers a broad range of approaches to learning that encourages creativity: multi-disciplinary teaching and learning, design studioenvironments, skills development through making and doing, serious games, and open-ended problem-based learning. This area includes the development and evaluation of innovative computational environments for learning that reward creativity leading to transformative changes in curriculum objectivesand structure. 4. *Supporting Creativity with Information Technology. *This areadevelops new software and interaction design to support people in being more creative and evaluates their performance through user studies either in controlled environments with empirical studies or in the context of a complex problem or situation with ethnographic studies. The emphasis in this area is the development of new computing environments where the environment itself may be a creative product, and the environment is intended to supportpeople in their creative activities.
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