2019
Authors
Bernardes, G; Aly, L; Davies, MEP;
Publication
SMC 2016 - 13th Sound and Music Computing Conference, Proceedings
Abstract
In this paper we present SEED, a generative system capable of arbitrarily extending recorded environmental sounds while preserving their inherent structure. The system architecture is grounded in concepts from concatenative sound synthesis and includes three top-level modules for segmentation, analysis, and generation. An input audio signal is first temporally segmented into a collection of audio segments, which are then reduced into a dictionary of audio classes by means of an agglomerative clustering algorithm. This representation, together with a concatenation cost between audio segment boundaries, is finally used to generate sequences of audio segments with arbitrarily long duration. The system output can be varied in the generation process by the simple and yet effective parametric control over the creation of the natural, temporally coherent, and varied audio renderings of environmental sounds. Copyright: © 2016 First author et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
2019
Authors
Navarro Caceres, M; Caetano, M; Bernardes, G; de Castro, LN;
Publication
SWARM AND EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION
Abstract
Chord progressions play an important role in Western tonal music. For a novice composer, the creation of chord progressions can be challenging because it involves many subjective factors, such as the musical context, personal preference and aesthetic choices. This work proposes ChordAIS, an interactive system that assists the user in generating chord progressions by iteratively adding new chords. At each iteration a search for the next candidate chord is performed in the Tonal Interval Space (TIS), where distances capture perceptual features of pitch configurations on different levels, such as musical notes, chords, and scales. We use an artificial immune system (AIS) called opt-aiNet to search for candidate chords by optimizing an objective function that encodes desirable musical properties of chord progressions as distances in the TIS. Opt-aiNet is capable of finding multiple optima of multi-modal functions simultaneously, resulting in multiple good-quality candidate chords which can be added to the progression by the user. To validate ChordAIS, we performed different experiments and a listening test to evaluate the perceptual quality of the candidate chords proposed by ChordAIS. Most listeners rated the chords proposed by ChordAIS as better candidates for progressions than the chords discarded by ChordAIS. Then, we compared ChordAIS with two similar systems, ConChord and ChordGA, which uses a standard GA instead of opt-aiNet. A user test showed that ChordAIS was preferred over ChordGA and Conchord. According to the results, ChordAlS was deemed capable of assisting the users in the generation of tonal chord progressions by proposing good-quality candidates in all the keys tested.
2019
Authors
Maçãs, C; Rodrigues, A; Bernardes, G; Machado, P;
Publication
International Journal of Art, Culture and Design Technologies
Abstract
2020
Authors
Cáceres, MN; Caetano, MF; Bernardes, G;
Publication
Artificial Intelligence in Music, Sound, Art and Design - 9th International Conference, EvoMUSART 2020, Held as Part of EvoStar 2020, Seville, Spain, April 15-17, 2020, Proceedings
Abstract
Chord progressions are core elements of Western tonal harmony regulated by multiple theoretical and perceptual principles. Ideally, objective measures to evaluate chord progressions should reflect their tonal fitness. In this work, we propose an objective measure of the fitness of a chord progression within the Western tonal context computed in the Tonal Interval Space, where distances capture tonal music principles. The measure considers four parameters, namely tonal pitch distance, consonance, hierarchical tension and voice leading between the chords in the progression. We performed a listening test to perceptually assess the proposed tonal fitness measure across different chord progressions, and compared the results with existing related models. The perceptual rating results show that our objective measure improves the estimation of a chord progression’s tonal fitness in comparison with existing models. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.
2019
Authors
Bernardes, G; Cocharro, D;
Publication
Encyclopedia of Computer Graphics and Games
Abstract
2020
Authors
Magalhaes, E; Jacob, J; Nilsson, N; Nordahl, R; Bernardes, G;
Publication
2020 IEEE CONFERENCE ON VIRTUAL REALITY AND 3D USER INTERFACES WORKSHOPS (VRW 2020)
Abstract
We present a novel physics-based concatenative sound synthesis (CSS) methodology for congruent interactions across physical, graphical, aural and haptic modalities in Virtual Environments. Navigation in aural and haptic corpora of annotated audio units is driven by user interactions with highly realistic photogrammetric based models in a game engine, where automated and interactive positional, physics and graphics data are supported. From a technical perspective, the current contribution expands existing CSS frameworks in avoiding mapping or mining the annotation data to real-time performance attributes, while guaranteeing degrees of novelty and variation for the same gesture.
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