This study examines the convergence between tradition and technological innovation as reflected in Romania’s 2025 academic landscape, focusing on two major events that linked musical heritage, artificial intelligence, and digital transformation. The first—an international conference hosted in Bucharest—addressed the impact of AI on financial markets, emphasizing algorithmic responsibility, regulatory ethics, and the balance between innovation and systemic stability. The second—The Science of Music: Excellence in Performance held in Brașov—highlighted the dialogue between music and emerging technologies, exploring how neural networks, computational creativity, and interdisciplinary research reshape contemporary understandings of authorship and artistic creation. Anchored in my contribution, “Musical Structures and Neural Networks: From Synchronous Polyphony to Algorithmic Ecologies,” the paper argues that algorithms do not replace human creativity but redistribute it across hybrid human–machine systems. By tracing continuities from classical polyphonic principles to modern AI architectures, the study shows that the future of artistic and academic practice lies in integrating technological agency with cultural memory. Taken together, these events illustrate Romania’s evolving role as a locus of interdisciplinary reflection, where tradition and algorithmic innovation co‑create new frameworks of meaning.
Adrian Leonard Mociulschi (Wed,) studied this question.