Similarit\'e en intension vs en extension : \`a la crois\'ee de l'informatique et du th\'e\^atre
Alain Bonardi (STMS), Francis Rousseaux (STMS, CRESTIC)

TL;DR
This paper explores the intersection of computer science and theater, comparing intensional and extensional similarity, and discusses innovative approaches where computers act as partners to actors, moving beyond traditional role definitions.
Contribution
It provides an overview of research integrating computers into theater, emphasizing interactive data mining to enable computers to collaborate with actors beyond predefined roles.
Findings
Computers can serve as creative partners in theater performances.
Interactive data mining offers new approaches to role and similarity modeling.
The paper bridges formal similarity concepts with theatrical practice.
Abstract
Traditional staging is based on a formal approach of similarity leaning on dramaturgical ontologies and instanciation variations. Inspired by interactive data mining, that suggests different approaches, we give an overview of computer science and theater researches using computers as partners of the actor to escape the a priori specification of roles.
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Taxonomy
TopicsLinguistics and Discourse Analysis · Cultural Insights and Digital Impacts
