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1 |
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Can robots be made creative enough to invent their own language? |
Luc Steels delivers the 2012 Simonyi lecture and asks can machines be creative enough to invent their own language? |
1:22:43 |
Luc Steels, Marcus du Sautoy |
18 Oct 2012 |
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2 |
Creative Commons |
Creativity Lecture 8: Creativity as a neuroscientific mystery |
Prof. Margaret Boden (Philosophy, Sussex) delivers a lecture as part of the Keble College Creativity series. |
0:52:38 |
Margaret Boden |
28 May 2012 |
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3 |
Creative Commons |
Distributed Creativity in Musical Performance |
Professor Eric F. Clarke gives a talk for the Keble College Creativity series on creativity in musical performances |
0:45:01 |
Eric F Clarke |
17 May 2012 |
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4 |
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Does the Mind have a Future? |
Baroness Greenfield discusses how Information Technology is changing the way humans think and feel. Whilst there are clear benefits, she also highlights the less desirable consequences, and suggests how best to minimise these threats. |
0:46:46 |
Susan Greenfield |
28 Feb 2012 |
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5 |
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Creativity Lecture 5: The Neuroscience of Creativity |
Professor Susan Greenfield explains how neuroscience can make innovative contributions to creativity by offering a perspective at the level of the physical brain. |
0:57:49 |
Susan Greenfield |
06 Feb 2012 |
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6 |
Creative Commons |
Creativity Lecture 4: Two Sides of the Creativity Coin - Innovation and Lock-in |
Professor Steve Rayner (University of Oxford) presents creative and innovative potential solutions to the energy crisis and problems caused by climate change. |
0:56:45 |
Steve Rayner |
07 Jul 2011 |
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7 |
Creative Commons |
Creativity Lecture 3: Creativity - Abduction or Improvisation? |
Tim Ingold (University of Aberdeen) discusses his current research, on the comparative anthropology of the line, exploring issues on the interface between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture. |
0:41:09 |
Tim Ingold |
20 Jun 2011 |
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8 |
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Creativity Lecture 2: Creative Selves, Creative Expression |
Professor Richard Harper (Microsoft Research, Cambridge) presents on how to design for 'being human' in an age when human-as-machine type metaphors, deriving from Turing and others, tend to dominate thinking in the area. |
0:40:33 |
Richard Harper |
20 Jun 2011 |