Conceptual Representations for Computational Concept Creation

Author:

Xiao Ping1ORCID,Toivonen Hannu1ORCID,Gross Oskar1,Cardoso Amílcar2ORCID,Correia João2ORCID,Machado Penousal2ORCID,Martins Pedro2ORCID,Oliveira Hugo Goncalo2ORCID,Sharma Rahul2ORCID,Pinto Alexandre Miguel3,Díaz Alberto4,Francisco Virginia4,Gervás Pablo4,Hervás Raquel4,León Carlos4,Forth Jamie5,Purver Matthew6,Wiggins Geraint A.7ORCID,Miljković Dragana8,Podpečan Vid8,Pollak Senja8ORCID,Kralj Jan8,Žnidaršič Martin8,Bohanec Marko9,Lavrač Nada9,Urbančič Tanja9,Velde Frank Van Der10,Battersby Stuart11

Affiliation:

1. University of Helsinki, Finland

2. CISUC, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal

3. LaSIGE, University of Lisbon, Portugal

4. Complutense University of Madrid, Spain

5. Goldsmiths, University of London, UK

6. Queen Mary University of London, UK

7. Vrije Universteit Brussel, Belgium 8 Queen Mary University of London, Brussel, Belgium

8. Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova, Ljubljana, Slovenia

9. Jožef Stefan Institute 8 University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia

10. University of Twente, AE Enschede, The Netherlands

11. Chatterbox Labs Ltd., UK

Abstract

Computational creativity seeks to understand computational mechanisms that can be characterized as creative. The creation of new concepts is a central challenge for any creative system. In this article, we outline different approaches to computational concept creation and then review conceptual representations relevant to concept creation, and therefore to computational creativity. The conceptual representations are organized in accordance with two important perspectives on the distinctions between them. One distinction is between symbolic, spatial and connectionist representations. The other is between descriptive and procedural representations. Additionally, conceptual representations used in particular creative domains, such as language, music, image and emotion, are reviewed separately. For every representation reviewed, we cover the inference it affords, the computational means of building it, and its application in concept creation.

Funder

H2020 Future and Emerging Technologies

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

General Computer Science,Theoretical Computer Science

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