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Music as Human Communication: An HCSNet Workshop on the Science of Music Perception, Performance and CognitionKeynote Speakers
GoalThe aim of this two-day national workshop is to present and discuss the latest research that investigates human communication in the form of music perception, performance and cognition. The theme is deliberately interdisciplinary to bring together established, early career, and student researchers from psychology, music, acoustics, computer science, linguistics, and speech science. Topics for discussion might include performance and musical acoustics, the development of musical expectancies, affect expression and recognition in music, near-universal features of music and cross-cultural issues, the modularity debate regarding music and language. Two keynote speakers (Prof Barbara Tillmann from CNRS, France and Prof Laurel Trainor from McMaster University, Canada) and student and staff researchers from around Australia will showcase methods for rigorous investigation of the arts, and highlight current knowledge of non-verbal cues to affect such as intensity, tempo, timing and rhythm, phrasing, intonation and prosody. The workshop will also be relevant to those interested in music information retrieval. Day 2 of the workshop will have a more specific focus on applications of music perception and cognition to issues of intonation in text-to-speech (TTS) synthesis systems and naturalness of automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems. The papers and brainstorming sessions on Day 2 will contribute to the HCSNet Priority Areas Effective Interfaces and Human and Machine Speech being designed to stimulate discussion of a new Art-Meets-Science approach to automated speech systems. This workshop is funded by the ARC Human Communication Sciences Network (HCSNet). Materials
Slides from Workshop presentationsThese slides are in Powerpoint format; they may be viewed with OpenOffice.org or PowerPoint Viewer. All slides copyright © their respective authors. |