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Distinguished Speaker Lecture Series

The Center for Information Society Studies presents the fourth in its Research Seminar Series, Spring 2001.

R. Michael Young, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science and Affiliated faculty member, Center for Information Society Studies

"Coherence and Control:
The Inevitable Battleground of Interactive Narratives"


Friday, April 6, 2001
12:00p.m.-1:15 p.m.
Caldwell Hall, M-8
NC State University

Lunch will be provided for faculty. If faculty wish to bring 1-2 students, we can provide lunches for them as well. To register and reserve a box lunch, please contact Beth Cassedy at beth_cassedy@ncsu.edu, including your name and dept., and indicate your choice of turkey, chicken salad, roast beef, or vegetarian lunch. The deadline for lunch reservations is WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4th.

About the seminar
Just as new, incredibly powerful gaming consoles like Sony's Playstation 2 begin to find their way into our living rooms, companies developing games for these systems are realizing the central role of narrative in the titles that they produce. Research on the Holy Grail of gaming software -- the automatic creation of compelling storylines that adapt to a user's desires, capabilities and activities -- is only now beginning to sketch out the potential to move gaming from its violence-centered base to a new hybrid of interactive entertainment and performance art. In this talk, I'll tell you why the next generations of entertainment software will be more than child's play and how our research group is using cold hard computer science to create storyworlds that people step into with plotlines that they play a substantive role in.

About R. Michael Young
Michael Young develops new technological tools in an effort to help people that are not information technology specialists interact with computers in more natural ways. Young led the development of the ideas and technologies underlying the Longbow discourse planner, a key component of several intelligent systems -- including the Sherlock intelligent tutoring system at University of Pittsburgh's Learning Research and Development Center and the Sage graphics display system at CMU's Robotics Institute -- designed to interact with their users via natural language. He leads the Liquid Narrative group at NCSU, a interdisciplinary research group of undergraduate, graduate and faculty researchers centered on computational models of interactive narraive. Before coming to NC State, Michael was a post-doctoral fellow at Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute. He earned a BS in Computer Science at California State University, Sacramento (1984), and MS in Computer Science from Stanford (1988) and a PhD degrees in Intelligent Systems at the University of Pittsburgh (1997). He has published widely on the uses of computers in interactive environments and in 2001 he was awarded a National Science Foundation CAREER Award, the NSF's highest award for young scientists.

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