Search
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
(Chapter / Bokkapittel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2010)
The paper reports on the development and activities in the recently established fourMs lab (Music, Mind, Motion, Machines) at the University of Oslo, Norway. As a meeting place for researchers in music and informatics, the ...
(Chapter / Bokkapittel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2008)
The paper presents some challenges faced in developing an experimental setup for studying coarticulation in music-related body movements. This has included solutions for storing and synchronising motion capture, biosensor ...
(Chapter / Bokkapittel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2012)
This paper presents an experiment on sound tracing, meaning an experiment on how people relate motion to sound. 38 participants were presented with 18 short sounds, and instructed to move their hands in the air while acting ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2010)
In our own and other research on music-related actions, findings suggest that perceived action and sound are broken down into a series of chunks in people’s minds when they perceive or imagine music. Chunks are here ...
(Book / Bok / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2011)
Editors: Alexander Refsum Jensenius, Anders Tveit, Rolf Inge Godøy, Dan Overholt
Table of Contents
-Tellef Kvifte: Keynote Lecture 1: Musical Instrument User Interfaces: the Digital Background of the Analog Revolution ...
(Journal article / Tidsskriftartikkel / AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2013)
Links between music and body motion can be studied through experiments called sound-tracing. One of the main challenges in such research is to develop robust analysis techniques that are able to deal with the multidimensional ...
(Chapter / Bokkapittel / PublishedVersion; Peer reviewed, 2012)
Our research on music-related actions is based on the conviction that sensations of both sound and body motion are inseparable in the production and perception of music. The expression "musicrelated actions" is here used ...