New Directions in Music and Human-Computer Interaction

New Directions in Music and Human-Computer Interaction [electronic resource] / edited by Simon Holland, Tom Mudd, Katie Wilkie-McKenna, Andrew McPherson, Marcelo M. Wanderley. - 1st ed. 2019. - IX, 306 p. 71 illus., 58 illus. in color. online resource. - Springer Series on Cultural Computing, 2195-9064 . - Springer Series on Cultural Computing, .

Introduction: Understanding Music Interaction and Why it Matters -- Part I DESIGN -- A Design WorkBench for Interactive Music Systems -- TMAP Design Cards for Technology-Mediated Audience Participation in Live Music -- The Poetry of Strange Connections: An Interview with Bill Verplank -- The Groove Pizza -- XronoMorph: Investigating Paths Through Rhythmic Space -- HCI Music and Art: An Interview with Wendy MacKay -- Part II INTERACTION (to do) -- Material-Oriented Musical Interactions -- Embodied Musical Interaction: Body Physiology, Cross Modality, and Sonic Experience -- Making as Research: An Interview with Kristina Andersen -- Detecting and Adapting to Users' Cognitive and Affective State to Develop Intelligent Musical Interfaces -- Creating DMI's to Allow Non-Musicians to Create Music -- Music, Design and Ethnography: An Interview with Steve Benford -- Part III COLLABORATION -- Applying Game Mechanics to Networked Music HCI Applications -- Mediated Musical Interactions in Virtual Environments -- Machine Learning, Music and Creativity: An Interview with Rebecca Fiebrink -- Free-Improvised Rehearsal-as-Research for Musical HCI. -- A Case Study in Collaborative Learning via DMIs for Participatory Music: Interactive Tango Milonga.

Computing is transforming how we interact with music. New theories and new technologies have emerged that present fresh challenges and novel perspectives for researchers and practitioners in music and human-computer interaction (HCI). In this collection, the interdisciplinary field of music interaction is considered from multiple viewpoints: designers, interaction researchers, performers, composers, audiences, teachers and learners, dancers and gamers. The book comprises both original research in music interaction and reflections from leading researchers and practitioners in the field. It explores a breadth of HCI perspectives and methodologies: from universal approaches to situated research within particular cultural and aesthetic contexts. Likewise, it is musically diverse, from experimental to popular, classical to folk, including tango, laptop orchestras, composition and free improvisation.

9783319920696

10.1007/978-3-319-92069-6 doi


User interfaces (Computer systems).
Human-computer interaction.
Digital humanities.
Music.
Interactive multimedia.
Multimedia systems.
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction.
Digital Humanities.
Music.
Media Design.

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