Keynote #1 Probing Rhythmic Synchronization in out Mind's Ear
Web Audio enables crowd-sourced surveys involving sound synthesis and interaction. My music-making experiences with collaboration technologies like Jacktrip have led to studies of how we imagine flows of sound in time, particularly those which require tight synchronization. Web-based “active listening” techniques make it possible to gather self-reports from large numbers of individuals asking about how we hear, imagine and produce musical “objects” which unfold in time.
@inproceedings{2017_KN1,
abstract = {Web Audio enables crowd-sourced surveys involving sound synthesis and interaction. My music-making experiences with collaboration technologies like Jacktrip have led to studies of how we imagine flows of sound in time, particularly those which require tight synchronization. Web-based “active listening” techniques make it possible to gather self-reports from large numbers of individuals asking about how we hear, imagine and produce musical “objects” which unfold in time.},
address = {London, United Kingdom},
author = {Chafe, Chris},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Web Audio Conference},
editor = {Thalmann, Florian and Ewert, Sebastian},
month = {August},
pages = {},
publisher = {Queen Mary University of London},
series = {WAC '17},
title = {Keynote #1 Probing Rhythmic Synchronization in out Mind's Ear},
year = {2017},
ISSN = {2663-5844}
}