音乐多模态互动:从身体到生态

Atau Tanaka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

音乐表演可以用多模态的术语来考虑——与乐器的物理互动产生声音输出,通常是在表演者视觉上阅读乐谱的时候。数字乐器(DMI)设计融合了HCI和乐器实践的原则。视听表演和其他形式的多媒体可能受益于多模态思维。这个主题回顾了二十年来与多模态互动研究领域的发展平行的互动音乐实践。BioMuse是一种早期的数字乐器系统,它使用肌电图肌肉感应,并通过第二种感应模式进行扩展,使力度和位置成为两种互补的模式[1]。Haptic Wave应用了跨模态信息显示的原理来创建一个触觉音频编辑器,使视障音频制作者能够“感觉”到他们在图形用户界面中看不到的音频波形[2]。VJ文化将音乐dj的理念延伸到创造视听文化体验。avui是一套创造性的编码工具,实现了性能UI和创造性视觉输出的融合[3]。《岩石管弦乐队》是与视觉艺术家Uta Kogelsberger的持续合作,通过物理和虚拟形式表现出来,随着时间的推移允许多模态[4]。无论是画廊中的实体展览还是YouTube 360上的音频反应3D动画,艺术作品的多种模式都支持其原始概念基础。这四个项目将多模式互动置于艺术研究的核心。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Musical Multimodal Interaction: From Bodies to Ecologies
Musical performance can be thought of in multimodal terms - physical interaction with musical instruments produces sound output, often while the performer is visually reading a score. Digital Musical Instrument (DMI) design merges tenets of HCI and musical instrument practice. Audiovisual performance and other forms of multimedia might benefit from multimodal thinking. This keynote revisits two decades of interactive music practice that has paralleled the development of the field of multimodal interaction research. The BioMuse was an early digital musical instrument system using EMG muscle sensing that was extended by a second mode of sensing, allowing effort and position to be two complementary modalities [1]. The Haptic Wave applied principles of cross-modal information display to create a haptic audio editor enabling visually impaired audio producers to 'feel' audio waveforms they could not see in a graphical user interface [2]. VJ culture extends the idea of music DJs to create audiovisual cultural experiences. AVUIs were a set of creative coding tools that enabled the convergence of performance UI and creative visual output [3]. The Orchestra of Rocks is a continuing collaboration with visual artist Uta Kogelsberger that has manifested itself through physical and virtual forms - allowing multimodality over time [4]. Be it a physical exhibition in a gallery or audio reactive 3D animation on YouTube 360, the multiple modes in which an artwork is articulated support its original conceptual foundations. These four projects situate multimodal interaction at the heart of artistic research.
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