Vortragsreihe Musik und Mathematik
Die interdisziplinäre Reihe widmet sich künstlerischen und wissenschaftlichen Perspektiven von Musik & Mathematik. Expert*innen aus den Bereichen Mathematik, Statistik, Computerwissenschaften, Komposition und Musikforschung eröffnen Einblicke in aktuelle Fragestellungen und Entwicklungen in den Grenzbereichen zwischen den Wissenschafts- bzw. Kunstsparten.
Eine Veranstaltung des Programmbereichs (Inter)Mediation (Interuniversitäre Einrichtung Wissenschaft & Kunst, Universität Salzburg/Universität Mozarteum Salzburg) in Kooperation mit dem Fachbereich Biowissenschaften der Universität Salzburg und der Paracelsus Medizinischen Privatuniversität Salzburg
Übersichtsplakat alle Vorträge „Musik & Mathematik“ im Sommersemester 2022
Musical Patterns in Musical Interactions
Understanding and Employing Repetition in Music
Utrecht
23.06.2022
Anja Volk
Department of Information and Computing Sciences, Utrecht University (NL)
Donnerstag, 23. Juni 2022, 18:00, Atelier im KunstQuartier, Bergstraße 12a, 5020 Salzburg
Over the past decades, mathematical and computational models of musical structures have been successfully developed in interdisciplinary research areas such as Mathematical Music Theory and Music Information Retrieval, with different goals such as music analysis, retrieval, classification or recommendation. In this talk, I will discuss how the modelling process on the one hand uncovers layers of implicit musical knowledge applied by experts and ordinary listeners when interacting with music, and on the other hand enables new forms of interaction with music. Taking repetition in music, specifically repeated patterns, as the central topic of this talk, I will show how the modeling process contributes to enhancing our understanding of the role of musical repetition for how we make sense of music. Moreover, I will discuss how we employ this knowledge for facilitating novel forms of musical interactions, such as within serious games for music education, health care and well-being.
Anja Volk is Associate Professor at the Department of Information and Computing Sciences, Utrecht University. She has a dual background in mathematics and musicology which she applies to cross-disciplinary approaches at the intersection of computer science and music. Her research aims at enhancing our understanding of music as a fundamental human trait while applying these insights for developing music technologies that offer new ways of interacting with music, such as in the newly emerging field of music, computing, and health.
In englischer Sprache
Thursday, 23. June 2022 |
18:00 | (UTC+01:00) Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna | 1 hr |
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Meeting number (access code): 2733 851 9217 |
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OUR GHOSTS IN THE SHELL
Salzburg & Online
05.05.2022
Patrik Lechner
Universität für Angewandte Kunst Wien, FH St. Pölten, FH Salzburg
Online & In Präsenz: Atelier im KunstQuartier, Bergstr. 12a, 1. OG 5020 Salzburg
In der Reihe „Musik & Mathematik“
Mit dem Projekt "our ghosts in the shell" hat Patrik Lechner gemeinsam mit dem Ensemble NAMES eine Konzertreihe entwickelt, in der eine Künstliche Intelligenz diverse Ebenen des künstlerischen Prozesses (mit-)gestaltet. Der Vortrag präsentiert, wie sich im Rahmen dreier Konzerte die Mensch-Maschinen-Interaktion darstellen kann und wie unterschiedliche Formen musikalischer Kommunikation erprobt werden.
Teilnahme kostenfrei.
Für Teilnahme in Präsenz Anmeldung erforderlich: E: Ingeborg.Schrems@plus.ac.at / T: +43 (0)662 8044 2380
Thursday, 5. May 2022 |
18:00 | (UTC+01:00) Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna | 1 hr |
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Music and Cardiology: What's your Heart got to do with Music?
Elaine Chew, CNRS, STMS Lab (Ircam), Paris, F
Online
17.03.2022
In der Reihe „Musik & Mathematik“
In englischer Sprache
Music and the heart have been closely intertwined in the romantic imagination. The pulsating heart pumps blood through the body, producing the rhythm of life. We shall explore the ways in which electrical impulses of the heart result in musical behaviors, and how mappings between heartbeats and music can inspire new ways to view music and heart rhythm disorders, mediated by mathematics. Music alters our physiological state. Our recent work focuses on making musicians’ expressive devices visible, mathematically and graphically. We shall see how musicians’ expressive choices lead to largely unconscious but quantifiable autonomic changes for both players and listeners. These changes can be observed in the heart rate, heart rate variability, respiration, and blood pressure or by pacemaker patients’ activation recovery intervals (time between a heartbeat and when the heart can beat again). The illustrations will be accompanied by music and technology demonstrations.
Prof. Elaine Chew, PhD, is a pianist and operations researcher working on the mathematical and computational modelling of musical structures with applications to the modelling of music performance, music-heart-brain interactions, computational arrhythmia research, and AI music generation.
Teilnahme kostenfrei / Keine Anmeldung
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From Music to Responsible Al
Cynthia C. S. LIEM, Delft University of Technology, NL
Salzburg & Online
31.03.2022
Atelier im KunstQuartier, Bergstr. 12a, 1. OG 5020 Salzburg)
In der Reihe „Musik & Mathematik“
In englischer Sprache
One of the major challenges in achieving trustworthy and responsible AI, is validating whether the systems we build actually do what we wish for them to do. In this, the balance needs to be found between that what can be measured, and that what we wish to achieve; here, mathematics, requirements, and human interpretation meet. In this lecture, Cynthia Liem discuss how the music domain has been a fertile ground for thinking about such questions, touching upon music signal representation, music interpretation, as well as music search and recommendation, from her both perspectives as an artist and technologist. Then, she will illustrate how this has helped her in her current projects in the broader space of trustworthy and responsible AI, touching upon inclusive information access, comprehensive testing strategies, and fair decision support systems.
Dr. Cynthia C. S. Liem, MMus, is Ass. Prof. in the Multimedia Computing Group of Delft University of Technology (NL), and pianist of the Magma Duo. Her research interests focus on making people discover new interests and content which would not trivially be retrieved in music and multimedia collections, assessing questions of validation and validity in data science, and fostering trustworthy and responsible AI applications when human-interpreted data is involved.
Teilnahme kostenfrei
Für Teilnahme in Präsenz Anmeldung erforderlich: E: Ingeborg.Schrems@plus.ac.at / T: +43 (0)662 8044 2380
Thursday, 31. March 2022 |
18:00 | (UTC+01:00) Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna | 1 hr |
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Meeting number (access code): 2733 126 4662 |
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