Tuesday, 23 April 2013

7th Global Conference: Visual Literacies

7th Global Conference
Visual Literacies

Thursday 7th November 2013 - Saturday 9th November 2013
Athens, Greece

Call for Presentations
This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary conference seeks to examine and explore issues surrounding visual literacy in regard to theory and praxis. Perspectives are sought from those engaged in fields such as education, visual arts, fine arts, literature, philosophy, psychology, critical theory and theology. These disciplines are indicative only as papers are welcomed from any area, profession and vocation in which visual literacy plays a part.

Papers, reports, work-in-progress and workshops are invited on issues related to any of the following themes;

1. Visual Literacy as Theory
- What are the theoretical constructs of your discipline?
- What are the current debates and directions of your field?
- What are the various forms of socio-cultural reactions and realizations of visual literacy?
- What are the modes and nodes of interdisciplinary connections to visual literacy in your field?
- How will the concept of visual literacy be described in the next decade in your discipline?
- How does the concept of 'framing' fit with visual literacy in your field?

2. Visual Literacy as Practice
- What are the forms of representation and realization of visual literacy in your field?
- What are the current debates and issues around the notion of 'practice' in your field?
- What are the current 'tools, approaches and applications' of visual literacy in your field?
- What are the current interdisciplinary connections to the 'tools, approaches and applications' of visual literacy in your field?
- What are the 'insiders views' visual literacy? (That is from the perspective of artists, taggers, digital natives, digital or visual immigrants)

3. Visual Literacy as Analysis
- What are the modes of visual literacy analysis in your field?
- What are the 'tools' of visual literacy analysis in your field?
- What are the current debates around analysis in your field?
- What are the current debates and forms of analysis in the areas of art history, fine arts, creative arts, multimodality, cinema, television, drama and IT?

4. Visual Literacy as an Interdisciplinary Overlap
- How is visual literacy connected to visual rhetoric and/or visual thinking: overlaps, questions and differences?
- How is visual literacy related to sensory perception?
- How is curriculum design in, or across disciplines connected to and through Visual literacy?

The Steering Group welcomes the submission of pre-formed panel proposals. 300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 14th June 2013. If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a full draft paper should be submitted by Friday 13th September 2013.

What to send:
300 word abstracts should be submitted simultaneously to all Organising Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats with the following information and in this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract, e) body of abstract, f) up to 10 keywords
E-mails should be entitled: VL7 Abstract Submission.

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using footnotes and any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as bold, italics or underline). Please note that a Book of Abstracts is planned for the end of the year. We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Organising Chairs

Phil Fitzsimmons: phil.fitzsimmons@avondale.edu.au
Rob Fisher: vl7@inter-disciplinary.net

The conference is part of the 'At the Interface' series of research projects run by ID.Net. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference will be eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into 20-25 page chapters for publication in a themed dialogic ISBN hard copy volume.

For further details of the conference, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/at-the-interface/education/visual-literacies/call-for-papers/

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.
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Monday, 22 April 2013

2nd International Online Conference on Electronics, Power and Control (IOCEPC2013 )

2nd International Online Conference on Electronics, Power and Control

27-28 June 2013
AECERI Organization, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Important dates: 
Paper Submission Deadline: 10 May 2013 
Notification of Acceptance: 1 June 2013 
Final Registration and Payment: 25 June 2013 
Conference: 27-28 June 2013

Web address: http://iocepc2013.aeceri.org
Paper Submission: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iocepc2013
Sponsored by: AECERI Organization
Indexed by: IEEE, IJSER (International Journal of Scientific and Engineering Research)
Enquiries: info@iocepc2013.aeceri.org
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Friday, 19 April 2013

Creating Characters, Inventing Lives: The Art of the Self, 1st International Symposium

1st International Symposium: Creating Characters, Inventing Lives: The Art of the Self

Part of the Research Program on: Aesthetic Lives, Artistic Selves

International Network for Alternative Academia - Extends a general invitation to participate

Enquiries: acc@alternative-academia.net
Web address: http://www.alternative-academia.net/ocs-2.3.5/index.php/TORONTO2013/CCIL-1/schedConf/cfp

Tuesday 21st to Thursday 23rd of May, 2013

Institutional Partner: Humber ITAL
Venue: Humber Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning
Lakeshore Campus (Building: Lakeshore Commons)

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Call for Papers

This trans-disciplinary research project is interested in exploring the lessons we can derive from the creative process and identify how productive it is beyond the boundaries of the work and creation itself.

Regardless of our awareness, our understanding of our selves, we have always been the product of creation â€" the result of the playful and subversive blurring of the boundaries between fiction and life, between self and other, between fantasy and reality. Who we are â€" how we tell the story of our lives â€" has always traversed the divides between artistic invention, personal reflection and historic fact; being as much the product of the creative process as the characters depicted by artists in their works. Yet, we have been resistant to this notion holding fast to the idea that the bonds between us are intransigent, that the self is impermeable to transformation, clinging to the idea of authenticity. New models of the self are necessitated -- models that emphasize the creative and transformative process by which the self is created. This project locates this search at the intersection of artistic invention and theoretical reflection. What can we learn from the creation of characters about our sense of the real, the construction of self and our bonds with others? In what ways do these processes overlap? How do they diverge?

We invite colleagues from all disciplines and professions interested in exploring and explaining these issues in a collective, deliberative and dialogical environment to send presentation proposals that address these general questions or the following themes:

1. Boundary Playfulness (or Playing with Boundaries): Fiction and The Real

- Why do we create: to become, to be, to reveal, to conceive of our lives differently, to compensate what we do not have but want dearly, to conceal our flaws, to work through our weaknesses, to rediscover and, perhaps even, reinvent our selves and the bonds we have with others, to live a life we do not have and will never have?
- How do boundaries of life, context, intimacy and identity change in the act of creating and the emergence of a creation?
- Should we care about boundary modifications and movements between fiction and the real? Does it matter if one dimension seeps into the other?
- Where do the boundaries between fiction and reality stand? Do these still hold and how can one conceive, today, of these boundaries?
- How are notions of the real affected by the creation of characters, by the creation of other realities or the mimicry of the real, by the multiplication of what becomes fiction and reality?
- What is left of the identity of the creator after the process of creation? Is there a transference of both meaning and the site of recognition from the person to the creative work? How is identity modified and transformed?
- Is fiction (sometimes) more real than what we call reality? How does that happen and what can we learn from those unique experiences?

2. Life and Biography: Always Present

- Do I create because in the act of creating I would love or hope to become? Is it the fear of nothingness that moves me to create?
- Can we create without letting self and biography seep in or bluntly take over? Is this really a problem?
- How does the act of creating characters become an act of reflecting self and biography? Can this be different?
- Does the self become exposed, explored, consolidated and enhanced in and with the act of creating?
- Is creating therapeutically legitimate or a hoax for psychological therapy?
- What is autobiography? What is autobiographical creation? Is it the transference of identity from body to creation or the act of creating a new self? How does an author and artist relate to his/her autobiography or autobiographical work?
- How does the creative work itself constitute an experience of estrangement from the author and artist? Does the work become a haven offering protection from the world? Does it estrange the creator once it becomes independent, dislocated from the author or artist?

3. Authorship, Authenticity and Authority

- Don’t we all borrow from each other, from the long and deep traditions, from the canonical, from the new and yet to be acknowledged?
- Should we abandon tropes of the authentic and authenticity? Should we redefine what we mean today by authenticity? What meaning might it carry currently for the process of creation and in the creative work?
- How do power relations play into the notion of the authentic and authorship?
- Do creators and artists really know what effect their work will have? Should we call this pursuit off?
- Why do we still believe that the author, creator, artist has to have the last word on the meaning of their work, of their creation? Is there any legitimacy in this idea or claim?
- Is not meaning born by way and through the dialogue that happens with an audience, reader, listener, observer, interpreter, consumer of the creative piece and work?
- Can we live with a world of meaning unhinged from the author's intention and actions?
- How is the new media altering, in significant ways, the creative process? How is it redefining the meaning of "creator"? How are the boundaries between the creator and the created being redefined?
- What effects does new media have over the creative bond between writer and reader, playwright and audience, painter and gallery visitor, filmmaker and cinema or video audience, music composer and listener, creator and consumer?
- How has electronic media transformed notions of the authentic and unique?

4. Success and Failure: A History of Recognition?

- In the world of historic value, why is death the best event for recognition? How can we reverse the set of principles that go into recognizing the greatness of authors and creators once they cannot speak, they cannot talk back?
- Is there any virtue in changing or reversing that logic: recognition in life?
- How are links made between recognition and success?
- What are the measures of success and how do these relate to recognition? Are these measures good for the recognition of creators and creative work; for fostering creators?
- How does the artist, the author, the creator understand perfection? What are the perversions of ideas and myths linked to perfection?
- Is there a perfect creation? Is there perfection in the creative process?
- What is the place of failure and the fear of failure in today’s creative process?
- What is an author prepared to do in order to achieve success? Would these be the same in order to obtain recognition?
- How much does recognition and success impact the creative process? Has this changed over time and through history?
- Is it possible to argue that both recognition and success are and have always been substantive parts and endless motivators for the creative process? What about failure and the fear of failure?

5. Myths of Creation

- How has inspiration survived the pass of time and history? How much do we still believe or hold on to notions of inspiration? What are the current ideas that circulate and inhabit creators' minds and lives?
-Is there a place for inspiration today? What kind of definition would it have? What kind of re-tooling would it require in order to have acceptance and legitimacy?
- Does inspiration require legitimation?
- What or who is a muse or a nymph? Where do they live and what territories to they inhabit? Why do they decide to hide from the naked eye?
- What is the current place of old and new mythologies in the creative process?
- How do "Narcissus" and "Pygmalion" make their presence known in creations and creative processes?
- What about other mythological figures that have found current embodiments?
- How do authors, creators and artists contribute to the reproduction of mythologies?
- Are mythologies eternal and substantial to creation itself and to the system of belief that foster creative, critical and artistic work?

If you are interested in participating in this Annual Symposium, submit a 400 to 500 word abstract by Friday 26th of April, 2013.

To submit an abstract online follow these steps:
1) Go to our webpage: www.alternative-academia.net
2) Select your Symposium of choice within the list of annual events (listed by period and city)
3) Go to LOG IN at the top of the page
4) Create a User Name and Password for our system and log in
5) Click on the Call for Papers for the Symposium
6) Go to the end of the Call for Papers page and click on the First Step of Submission Process button
7) Follow the instructions provided for completing the abstract submission process

To facilitate the processing of abstracts, we ask that you use Arial Font Size 10 and that you use plain text, resisting the temptation of using special formatting, such as bold, italics or underline.

For every abstract proposal submitted, we acknowledge receipt. If you do not receive a reply from us within three days, you should assume the submission process was not completed successfully. Please try again or contact our technical support for clarifications.

All presentation and paper proposals that address these questions and issues will be fully considered and evaluated. Accepted abstracts will require a full draft paper by Friday 10th of May, 2013. Papers presented at the symposium are eligible for publication as part of a digital or paperback book.

We invite colleagues and people interested in participating to disseminate this call for papers. Thank you for sharing and cross-listing where and whenever appropriate.


Hope to meet you in Toronto!


Symposium Coordinators:

Wendy O'Brien
Professor of Social and Political Theory
School of Liberal Studies
Humber Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Email: Wendy.OBrien@humber.ca

Oana Strugaru
Faculty of Letters and Communication Sciences
Stefan cel Mare University
Suceava, Romania
Email: oana_andriese@yahoo.com

Alejandro Cervantes-Carson
General Coordinator
International Network for Alternative Academia
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Email: acc@alternative-academia.net

*****

Informational Note:

Alternative Academia is an international network of intellectuals, academics, independent scholars and practitioners committed to creating spaces, both within and beyond traditional academe, for creative, trans-disciplinary and critical thinking on key themes. We offer annual and biannual symposiums at sites around the world, providing forums that foster the development of new frames of reference and innovative structures for the production and expansion of knowledge and theory. Dialogue, discussion and deliberation define both the methods employed and the values upheld by this network.

Visit our website at: www.alternative-academia.net
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5th Annual International Crime, Media and Popular Culture Studies Conference: A Cross Disciplinary Exploration

5th Annual International Crime, Media and Popular Culture Studies Conference: A Cross Disciplinary Exploration
23rd to 25th September 2013
Terre Haute, Indiana, United States of America

We invite those who are engaged in research, teaching and practices associated with the relationship between crime, deviance, social justice, and/or policy and law and that of media and popular culture. Each presentation must have a media or popular culture component. We accept both qualitative and quantitative research from all disciplines. In addition to the traditional panel presentation this conference also provides nine featured speaker sessions and entertainment each night of the conference. Each year we have presenters from 10 to 15 countries from a wide variety of backgrounds.

Abstracts and registration payments are due by May 6, 2013.

Enquiries: cmpc@indstate.edu
Web address: http://www.indstate.edu/ccj/popcultureconference/
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Thursday, 18 April 2013

IT,Multimedia and Communications Conference 2013

IT,Multimedia and Communications Conference 2013
25th to 27th June 2013
Bangkok, Thailand
Enquiries: contact@tomorrowpeople.org
Web address: http://www.itcomconference.org
Sponsored by: Tomorrow People Organization

To whom it may concern:

IT,Multimedia and Communication Conference is a three day academic and scientific event, aimed to be a place of networking and knowledge sharing among experts in related fields.

We welcome academics, researchers, professionals, administrators, educational leaders, policy makers, industry representatives, advanced students, and others interested in the topic.

Conference topics include, but are not limited to:

Business Communication
Business Intelligence and Management
Cloud computing
Communication and Democracy
Communication in education
Communication Theory and Methodology
Communications and Networking
Computational Science and Technology
Cyber security
Data Base Management
Data Mining and Data fusion
Digital Communication, Regulation and Social Action
Digital Signatures
E-commerce and E-government
Educational technologies
Emerging technologies
Global Networks
ICT in Environmental Sciences
Information economics and Management
Information Systems and Technology
Information Technology Management
Integrated Marketing Communications
Intercultural Communication
International and Global Communication
Internet Technology IT and innovation Management
Information System
Mass Communication in Culture and Society
Mass Communication in Politics
Media Regulation and Policy
Media Technologies
Media, Ethics and Law
Media, Religion and Culture
Media’s Social Responsibility
Multimedia and security
Multimedia communication, networking and mobility
Multimedia databases, digital libraries, and social media
Organizational Communication
Social aspects of multimedia
Social aspects of the new communication technologies
Social Media Telecommunication and networks
Visual Communication
Wireless Communication and Mobile Computing

Abstract submission deadline is May 21st 2013. Papers will be published in the official ISBN conference publication.

We look forward to seeing you in June in Bangkok!
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Making Sense of: Food

2nd Global Conference
Making Sense of: Food

Monday 4th November 2013 - Wednesday 6th November 2013
Athens, Greece

Call for Presentations
'You are what you eat' is a saying that usually signifies the influence of diet on health and well-being. When we turn this adage around - 'What you eat is what you are' - we see more clearly the broader implications of our ways with food. Our history and culture as well as our economic and social circumstances determine, and in turn are reflected in, the nature of our food consumption. The same applies to our personal beliefs and predispositions. Eating is an everyday necessity - and yet there is an immense variety in the manner in which we nourish ourselves. Furthermore, mostly due to circumstances beyond our control, not all of us humans have access to adequate nutrition. It follows that eating requires our attention, one way or another, throughout our lives, pleasantly for some, and desperately for others. Indeed, it has been observed that in rich societies people obsess about food because they have too much, and in poor societies they think about it all the time because they have too little.

The vicissitudes of consumption do not constitute the whole story about food. What ends up on the plate has usually arrived there after a long and complex journey which involves not only time and distance - again, variably so - but also a multitude of processes. The extent to which these are understood is by no means equal in all societies and cultures; some people live much closer to their food supply than others, and/or are more personally active in its production and preparation. Food is central to the economy of social systems at all levels; on global scale, food is deeply implicated in the overall economic and political circumstances of the contemporary world.

The inter-disciplinary project seeks to open up a multi-faceted enquiry into the ways in which food and its consumption are enmeshed in all aspects of human existence. Certainly today there is no shortage of commentaries on this subject, both in the public arena and within academia, and there is broad recognition of the place of food in the globalised economy - as well as of its role in discourses about international inequalities, climate change and public health issues. A focus on the perceived problems of the day, however, often results in specific 'fields' of study where the high level of activity, productive though it is, may create barriers to an understanding of different perspectives. This project will provide a framework for a broadly based dialogue concerning food and eating. It is our hope that this will put on our table a variety of matters to be considered at a number of levels and from many different points of view.

Presentations, papers, performances, work-in-progress and workshops are invited on any issues related to the following themes:

Food and existential matters:
- Eating and evolution
- Food and group identity: food as manifestation of cultural origins and influences
- Food as transmigration, diaspora and de-colonialism.
- Food and ritual
- Eating as a need and as a want: what is appetite?
- Food and philosophy

Representations of food and eating:
- The histories of food; repasts of the past
- Reflections of food and eating in literature
- Food and the performing arts
- Portrayals of consumption in visual culture
- Food and the modern media
- Food as metaphor

Eating and well-being:
- Fearing food - fears and facts
- Beliefs and controversies about food and wellness
- Health, illness and food in medical discourses
- The magic of food - ancient and modern; food as fetish
- The role of 'expert' advice in eating practices
- 'Diets' - disturbed eating patters or rational action?

Food and society:
- Food at the interface with class and culture
- The politics of food production and consumption
- Food security: issues of quantity and quality
- The industrialisation of food production and its counter-movements
- 'Foodism': conspicuous consumption, or identity management?

Working with food:
- Food production and provision; pleasures and problems
- The restaurant: guests' perspective
- Cooking and serving for customers
- Being a chef: the reality and the mystique
- Behind the counter of the gourmet store
- The daily bread; making and baking


What to Send:
300 word abstracts or presentation proposals should be submitted simultaneously to both Organising Chairs by Friday 14th June 2013 abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats with the following information and in this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract, e) body of abstract.
E-mails should be entitled: FOOD2 Abstract Submission.

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using footnotes and any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as bold, italics or underline). We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Organising Chairs

Don Sanderson: mark181a@bigpond.com
Rob Fisher: food2@inter-disciplinary.net

The conference is part of the Making Sense of: programme of research projects. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions which are innovative and exciting.

For further details of the conference, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/probing-the-boundaries/making-sense-of/food/call-for-presentations/

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.
To unsubscribe from Conference Alerts click here.
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Wednesday, 17 April 2013

3rd Global Conference: Writing

3rd Global Conference
Writing

Sunday 10th November 2013 - Tuesday 12th November 2013
Athens, Greece

Call for Presentations
The notion of what constitutes writing is currently undergoing new directions while simultaneously experiencing tensions from historical forces and paradigm shifts in processes and mechanisms. Hence this 'triple blind peer reviewed' research and publications project on Writing will explore the multitude of facets of writing from an interdisciplinary perspective. While it seeks to explore the current multimodal, intertextual and intersemiotic facets of writing, contributors may also unpack how writing has been manifested in previous historical eras and how these roots are connected to the current digital age and how it may arise in the future.

'All writing comes from somewhere' and with this axiom in mind this project will not only examine the pragmatic elements of writing but also the complex issues concerning the metafunctions of writing as a creative and purposeful process across various disciplines.

Papers, presentations, reports, workshops and pre-formed panels are invited on, but not limited to any of the following focus areas;

1. Writing as a Creative Process: Theory and Practice
- What are the origins and forms of creative writing?
- What are the personal and interpersonal relationship between creativity and writing?
- How is effective and creative writing developed and nurtured?
- How do various disciplines understand the pragmatic elements of writing and the thought processes that underpin writing?
- What are the similarities/differences in understanding between the related research disciplines?
- How can creative writing be fostered in a world dominated by measurement, outcomes and benchmarks?
- How do authors actually write?
- What can we learn from professional writers in regard to academic writing?

2. Writing across the Disciplines: Theory and Practice
- How do various disciplines define writing?
- The psychology, philosophy and pedagogy of writing of various fields of thought
- What is creativity in theory and practice in the business world?
- Can writing be taught?
- How do readers engage with writing?
- What does engagement with writing and the writing process mean for adults and for children?
- How does writing develop in all age groups or across age groups?
- What are the various forms Inter-disciplinary approaches to teaching writing?
- Historical and contemporary representations of writing as art, in film and literature?
- The future role of writing?
- How will the visual media be related to writing in the next decade or beyond?
- The relationships between children's engagement with television, film, visual literacy and writing?
- Traditional forms of writing: what are they and how do they fit in the visual age?
- The role and nature of learning theories and their view of writing

3. Critical and Cultural Thinking
- How is writing linked to critical thinking? Is it the same as critical literacy?
- Where does this writing ability come from?
- What is the role of the 'significant other' in developing critical engagement with writing at home, school and beyond?
- What are the conditions that foster critical thinking and critical writing?
- How is writing engendered and produced in different contexts of cultural contexts?
- Developing writing as life skills, social issues and education for citizenship in the 21st century

Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 14th June 2013. If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a full draft paper should be submitted by Friday 13th September 2013.

What to Send
300 word abstracts should be submitted to the Organising Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats, following this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract, e) body of abstract, up to 10 keywords
E-mails should be entitled: Contributors Family Name: Writing 3 Abstract Submission

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as bold, italics or underline). We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Organising Chairs

Phil Fitzsimmons: phil.fitzsimmons@avondale.edu.au
Rob Fisher: write2@inter-disciplinary.net

The conference is part of the Education Hub series of research projects, which in turn belong to the At the Interface programmes of Inter-Disciplinary.Net. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference are eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into a themed ISBN hard copy volume or volumes.

For further details of the conference, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/at-the-interface/education/writing/call-for-papers/

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.
To unsubscribe from Conference Alerts click here.
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This announcement is distributed via Conference Alerts.
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