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The WhoLoDancE Kick-Off Meeting has been organised in January 18th-19th, 2016, hosted by the project coordinator, Lynkeus, at its premises in Rome.
\nOne of the main concerns for projects like WholoDance, which brings together artistic and technical partners, is to coordinate harmoniously the process of developing technologically advanced tools while preserving the artistic value that is at the core of the kind of innovation Wholodance aims to create. For this reason, dedicated moments of brainstorming were organised during the meeting, to solve possible issues or misunderstanding, in order to avoid any possible artistic as well as technical issues capable of jeopardising the fulfilment of the project objectives.
\nIn particular, the dance companies, together with the leader of WP1 ATHENA and the leader of WP7 COVUNI, during a separate session, agreed upon the first version of a short list of movement and learning principles, which are needed to set the theoretical background at the core of Wholodance. More details on this meeting are provided in the description of WP1.
\nAs a result of the whole process, a list of issues and relevant action points has been implemented. This list is provided below in a short version, and at the end of each WP description.
\nAlso, at the end of the meeting, a number of tools developed by the partners during former projects have been presented and discussed, in particular focusing on their possible re-usability and interoperability within the WhoLoDancE framework.
\nWith regard to the coordination effort, a monthly teleconference has been scheduled for the next six months of the project, and at least additional TC per month has been envisioned to solve the issues that may arise during the project development.
\nTo facilitate the cooperation among partners, a google drive account, a dedicated Dropbox folder and a Vimeo channel have been created. The latter will also serve for the dissemination of the project. On this regard, partners agreed upon a number of selected dissemination opportunities, while Dance Companies presented a number of dance performances that can be developed within Wholodance and can be of use for the dissemination events that are envisioned.
The community is meant to serve as an archive of all the scientific material produced throughout the project, including journal articles, conference proceedings, presentations, posters, public deliverables and reports.
\r\n\r\nAll above-mentioned materials are accepted providing they are strictly relevant to the project and open access publishing is allowed within the publishing agreement.
\r\n", "page": "WhoLoDancE is an EU funded innovation project. By applying multimodal technologies such as motion capture, similarity search, computational models, automated analysis of non-verbal expressive features, movement content analysis, and complex data analytics, WhoLoDancE aims at innovating dance teaching methods and choreographic composition, while also preserving the European dance cultural heritage. - www.wholodance.eu
\r\n\r\nWholodance is a Research and Innovation Action funded under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Programme. The project aims at developing and applying breakthrough technologies to Dance Learning in order to achieve results that will have relevant impacts on numerous targets including, but not limited to, the dance practitioners ranging from Researchers and Professionals to Dance Students and the Interested Public. Wholodance focuses on five main Objectives, described below.
\r\n\r\n1. Investigate bodily knowledge by applying similarity search tools, computational models, emotional content analysis and techniques for the automated analysis of non-verbal expressive movement to dance data that will help investigate movement and learning principles, vocabularies, mental imagery and simulation connected to Dance Practises.
\r\n\r\n2. Preserve the cultural heritage by creating a proof-of-concept motion capture repository of dance motions built-in methods allowing interpolations, extrapolations and synthesis through similarity search among different compositions documenting diverse and specialized dance movement practices, and learning approaches.
\r\n\r\n3. Innovate the teaching of dance by developing among others a life-size volumetric display that will enable a dance student to literally step inside the Dance master’s body that through the use of immersive and responsive motion capture data, will Identify and respond to collisions between the physical and virtual bodies.
\r\n\r\n4. Revolutionize choreography by building and structuring an interactive repository of motion capture dance libraries. Custom dance data blending engine will give choreographers and dance teachers a powerful tool to blend and assemble an infinite number of dance compositions.
\r\n\r\n5. Widen the access and practice of dance by providing access to the created dance database through commercially available consumer-grade motion capture devices like the MS Kinect, Intel’s real sense and others.
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\nThe community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nZenodo’s general policies and Terms of Use apply to all content.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository accepts all digital research objects which is a research output stemming from one of EU’s research and innovation funding programmes. The funding programmes currently include:
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\nRecords found among Zenodo’s existing content will on a regular basis automatically be integrated if they are found to comply with the requirements. The submissions through this method are integrated into the EU Open Research Repository with delay in a fully automated way.
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", "description": "Open repository for EU-funded research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom and earlier Framework Programmes.", "organizations": [ { "id": "00k4n6c32" } ], "page": "The EU Open Research Repository is a Zenodo-community dedicated to fostering open science and enhancing the visibility and accessibility of research outputs funded by the European Union. The community is managed by CERN on behalf of the European Commission.
\nThe mission of the repository is to support the implementation of the EU's open science policy, providing a trusted and comprehensive space for researchers to share their research outputs such as data, software, reports, presentations, posters and more. The EU Open Research Repository simplifies the process of complying with open science requirements, ensuring that research outputs from Horizon Europe, Euratom, and earlier Framework Programmes are freely accessible, thereby accelerating scientific discovery and innovation.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository serves as a complementary platform to the Open Research Europe (ORE) publishing platform. Open Research Europe focuses on providing a publishing venue for peer-reviewed articles, ensuring that research meets rigorous academic standards. The EU Open Research Repository provides a space for all the other research outputs including data sets, software, posters, and presentations that are out of scope for ORE. This holistic approach enables researchers to not only publish their findings but also share the underlying data and materials that support their work, fostering transparency and reproducibility in the scientific process.
\nCurrently in its pilot phase and set to be fully operational during autumn 2024, the EU Open Research Repository is constantly evolving. Efforts are committed to integrating cutting-edge features, including automated curation checks and FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) assistance, to further support the research community. The goal is to provide researchers with a simple goto solution for making their publicly funded research open and as FAIR as possible.
\nThe EU Open Research Repository is funded by the European Union under grant agreement no. 101122956(HORIZON-ZEN). For more information about the project see https://about.zenodo.org/projects/horizon-zen/.
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