This report summarises the discussion and experimental work produced by the authors at the 2009 symposium Computational Creativity: An Interdisciplinary Approach, Dagstuhl Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik. It outlines the motivation for using computational techniques to stimulate human creativity, briefly summarising its historical context and predecessors, and describes two software studies produced by the group as base-line exemplars of these ideas.
@InProceedings{jones_et_al:DagSemProc.09291.28, author = {Jones, Daniel and Bown, Oliver and McCormack, Jon and Pachet, Francois and Young, Michael and Berry, Rodney and Asaf, Iris and Porter, Benjamin}, title = {{Stimulating creative flow through computational feedback}}, booktitle = {Computational Creativity: An Interdisciplinary Approach}, pages = {1--10}, series = {Dagstuhl Seminar Proceedings (DagSemProc)}, ISSN = {1862-4405}, year = {2009}, volume = {9291}, editor = {Margaret Boden and Mark D'Inverno and Jon McCormack}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl -- Leibniz-Zentrum f{\"u}r Informatik}, address = {Dagstuhl, Germany}, URL = {https://drops.dagstuhl.de/entities/document/10.4230/DagSemProc.09291.28}, URN = {urn:nbn:de:0030-drops-22232}, doi = {10.4230/DagSemProc.09291.28}, annote = {Keywords: Computational creativity} }
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