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[Commlist] CFP International Conference "Generative Images - Generative Imageries: Challenges of Visual Communication (Research) in the Age of AI"
Fri Jul 05 06:30:10 GMT 2024
Upcoming Abstract Submission Deadline for the International Conference
"Generative Images - Generative Imageries: Challenges of Visual
Communication (Research) in the Age of AI" of the DGPuK (German
Communication Association) Visual Communication Section,
co-sponsored by the Visual Communication Studies Division of the
International Communication Association at the ZeMKI (Centre for Media,
Communication and Information Research) of the University of Bremen
Abstract submission deadline is July 15, 2024.The conference is to be
held from November 20-22, 2024 in Bremen.
Generative Images - Generative Imageries: Challenges of Visual
Communication (Research) in the Age of AI
Societal discourse about the benefits, risks, and challenges of
artificial intelligence (AI) is in full swing. To date much of the
debate has focused on text-to-text generators such as Chat-GPT, Bing, or
Bard (for a recent overview see Sachs-Hombach et al. 2023). Yet, rapid
AI development is also fundamentally changing visual communication: With
Stable Diffusion, Dall-E or Midjourney, powerful AI generators of images
and image sequences have long been available whose output is impressive
in terms of diversity, richness of detail and image complexity. AI-
generated images have long been used in a variety of media, social, and
political contexts - even for strategic persuasion and political
propaganda - and without the generative origin being obvious to users or
being disclosed.
Generative images - generative imageries (GI) - thus offer enormous
potential to fundamentally change the production, use, reception and
handling of images. At the same time, little light has been shed on what
it actually means for our understanding of imagery when images are
increasingly produced generatively. Does this mean the “end of truth” as
the established German news magazine Der Spiegel headlined in July 2023
emphasizing the challenges of generative imagery?
Against this background, we would like to use the upcoming international
conference of the Visual Communication section of the DGPuK (German
Communication Association) in Bremen and online to explicitly focus on
taking stock of, reflecting on, discussing, and further developing our
scientific understanding of generative images. In the context of the
conference Generative Images - Generative Imageries we would like to
explore the emerging field of tension around generative imagery and
examine AI-generated images from four interrelated perspectives:
* From an object-centered perspective, in which we invite submissions,
which address the specific characteristics, the specific communicative
potentials and challenges of generative images in comparison to
non-generative images. With regard to ‘photo-realistic’ generative
media: How and, if applicable, under which conditions are images still
“taken for true” in the age of their AI generativity? Is there a
fundamental change in the communicative potentials that images bring to
discourses? Do images lose originality and intrinsic value through the
loss of the photographic representation of reality? Do they lose visual
salience and attention-capturing power? With regard to non-realistic
images: Which new or hybrid image genres emerge having which
characteristics? And on the level of meta-reflection: How is the
“cultural distinctness” of AI-generated images constructed in
scientific, media-public and private discourse contexts? Which cultural
imaginaries – from disruptive power, to evolutionary continuation within
the history of image manipulation, to new creative potentials –
accompany the advent of generative images? Which risks and opportunities
are highlighted under which perspectives and premises? In which thematic
contexts are the potentials and risks of generative images discussed?
* From a production-centered perspective, we seek contributions focusing
on the production and presentation contexts of generative images in
order to better understand routines and biases of the use of generative
images. Submissions in this area could address questions such as: What
are techniques, motives, and routines that favor the production and
communicative use of AI-generated images? Which affordances and options
for action do (different) AI image generators offer? Which are the
commercial goals of the tech companies developing AI tools? How do they
work and train their engines? Which data practices are linked to the
production of generative images? : How far are generative images biased?
What leeway for critical action on media algorithms exists? Which
routines of action do laypersons and professional communicators develop
in the context of the production and use of AI-generated images (e.g.,
“prompt engineering”)? To what extent do they reflect the artificial
character of AI-generated images and possible consequences for visual
communication (e.g., open questions of ownership)? Which – if any -
transparency practices are exercised by the communicators themselves,
highlighting the generative origin of pictures? By means of which
authentication strategies (e.g. fact-checking; source-checking) do
communicators check source material with regard to concrete AI generated
and/or AI- augmented image elements?
* From a reception- and usage-oriented perspective, asking how people
appropriate generative images: How do they encounter, distribute and
discuss generative images, e.g. in social media? How do recipients
recognize generative images? With which attitude of reception do they
face (different forms and genres of) generative imagery? Through which
reception-related practices, identifiers and conventions do recipients
evaluate for themselves what claim to reality and what (symbolic)
credibility generative images have? Which special visual or media
literacy skills do users acquire when dealing with AI-generated images?
Which ones do they lack in order to gain a reflective attitude of use
and reception when dealing with AI-generated images?
* From a methodological and research-ethical perspective, we aim to
discuss questions such as: Which (innovative) methodological approaches
and procedures can we use to capture the particularities of AI-generated
images? How can we empirically grasp their communicative production and
presentation contexts? With which established and innovative methods
(combinations) can we empirically illuminate their impact potentials?
How and for which goals can we integrate generative images into existing
or new visual research designs and strategies (e.g. as stimulus
material)? What new challenges and questions arise with the use of AI in
visual contexts? What new opportunities and functionalities are
revealed? How to deal with open questions regarding copyright and
protection of privacy? How to fight the abuse and harmful use of
generative AI? How should the use of AI visuals be characterized in
different contexts, such as art, politics, education etc.)?
The aim of the international conference is to discuss these and other
questions on phenomena of generative imagery with national and
international experts from the background of visual communication and
media research, image science, as well as audience research and media
effect studies, to situate them in the context of current approaches to
analyzing the potentials and limits of communicative AI (Hepp et al,
2022) and make them accessible for further scientific analysis. In
addition to a clear commitment to the international and
interdisciplinary orientation of visual communication research, the
conference aims in particular to initiate and encourage conversations
between visual communication research and other fields concerned with
the impact of generative AI. Provided that they enrich the discussion of
Generative Images - Generative Imageries in a broader sense, "creative",
"unconventional" contributions to the conference theme are also welcome.
Therefore, in addition to traditional submissions of academic
presentations, submissions for innovative session formats with workshop
character are encouraged, in which conference attendees can actively
participate in advancing theoretical, conceptual and methodological
reflection in creative settings. Aiming to establish common ground for
interdisciplinary discussion, we kindly ask submitters to briefly
outline their understandings of what generative images are, and from
which approaches they look at the specific areas of interest.
The DGPuK (German Communication Association) Visual Communication
section is particularly interested in promoting early career
researchers. Therefore, we would like to explicitly encourage early
career scholars and PhD students to submit. A best paper award will
recognize outstanding contributions by emerging academics.
Submission Details
The contributions to be submitted should be original research and must
not have already been published or presented in identical form; this
must be explicitly stated on the cover sheet of the submission.
The conference language is English to allow inclusive discussion in a
rapidly evolving and highly international research area. Presentations
in alternative languages are possible, but must be prerecorded using
English subtitles and slides. For the coordination of the conference, it
should be noted on the abstract submission if the presentation will be
pre-recorded in another language.
Please send your proposals for presentations (duration of the
presentation: 15 minutes), full panels or creative sessions in the form
of an "Extended Abstract" (800 words) as a pdf document via e-mail to
the following recipients by July 15, 2024:
For the organizing institute:
Prof. Dr. habil. Stephanie Geise
ZeMKI (Centre for Media, Communication and Information Research),
University of Bremen, E-mail: (sgeise /at/ uni-bremen.de)
<mailto:(sgeise /at/ uni-bremen.de)>
For the DGPuK (German Communication Association) Visual Communication
Section:
Dr. Wolfgang Reissmann, FU Berlin, E-mail:
(wolfgang.reissmann /at/ fu-berlin.de) <mailto:(wolfgang.reissmann /at/ fu-berlin.de)>
For the ICA Visual Communication Studies Division:
Dr. Saumava Mitra, School of Communications | Dublin City University,
E-mail: (saumava.mitra /at/ dcu.ie) <mailto:(saumava.mitra /at/ dcu.ie)>
Review process
All proposals will be reviewed in an anonymous review process.
Therefore, we ask that you add a separate cover sheet to the abstracts
that includes the information (1) paper title and (2) name and contact
information of the submitters. Please also remember to anonymize the
file. In the review process, submissions will be judged on the following
five criteria: (1) contribution to the conference topic, (2)
plausibility of theoretical foundation, (3) appropriateness of approach
(including methodology, if applicable), (4) clarity and conciseness of
presentation, and (5) contribution to the research field (relevance &
originality). Feedback on acceptance to the conference will be provided
no later than August 2024.
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