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Information Visualization:

Information Visualization:. Application to Musical Alphabets. By Jonathan Wesel. Information Visualization. “Unnatural” graphical representations of abstract data Musical staff example vs non-visual alternative?. Musical Representation.

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Information Visualization:

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  1. Information Visualization: Application to Musical Alphabets By Jonathan Wesel

  2. Information Visualization • “Unnatural” graphical representations of abstract data • Musical staff example • vs non-visual alternative?

  3. Musical Representation • Standard modern musical notation is credited to Pythagoras (Hall, 1928) • Representation by human processing (Deutsch/Feroe, 1981)

  4. Enhanced Visualization • Gestalt Laws of Visual Perception • Similarity • Proiximity • Continuation • Color • Color coding • Color and sound • Visual cues • Music and motion.

  5. Gestalt Laws • Similarity : group similar elements

  6. Gestalt Laws • Similarity : group similar elements

  7. Gestalt Laws • Similarity : group similar elements problem…

  8. Gestalt Laws • Similarity : group similar elements problem… …solution

  9. Gestalt Laws • Proximity: group close elements

  10. Gestalt Laws • Proximity: group close elements Two groups…

  11. Gestalt Laws • Proximity and Similarity • comparison to similarity solution: • Same result • Proximity was used to solve similarity problem

  12. Gestalt Laws • Continuity: group elements to form smooth curves or lines • Meaningful color: • Pitch ascent = rising colors • Pitch descent = falling colors

  13. Gestalt Laws • Similarity, Proximity, & Continuity • Use/Effect requires experimentation

  14. Color • Pythagoras: • “Through vibration comes motion; through motion comes color; through color comes tone. • Newton: • Split spectrum of light into 5 colors, then added 2 to “complete the octave”

  15. Color • The color of music (Schloss, 2008) • Participants chose colors that were most and least consistent with classical music they were presented with • A strong agreement was found between the colors chosen to be most consistent with the same musical selections.

  16. Color • Color in Music-Reading (Rogers, 1996) • Elementary students were taught rhythm by using notations in both color and black and white. • Hand clapping was used to demonstrate the students interpretation. • Students who used the colored notation scored higher in accuracy as well as noting greater enjoyment from the lessons.

  17. Music and Motion • Study, Barnes-Burroughs, 2004 • Students of music would follow the contour of a melody with their head and neck producing a negative result in the sound. • Can this be fixed by an alternative representation?

  18. Music and Motion • Suggestion • Mapped notes to colors • New representation

  19. Music and Motion • This visualization seems to solve the problem, but creates many more problems. (octaves ect…) • This visualization is unlikely to be effective because it is too far from what is well known.

  20. Conclusion • Further research and experimentation must be done to determine effectiveness of… • Using Gestalt Laws • Using Color • Removing Contour

  21. Sources Allchin, Douglas. "Newton's Colors." SHiPS Resource Center. 10 Oct. 2008 <http://www1.umn.edu/ships/updates/newton1.htm>. Barnes-Burroughs, Kathryn, Christopher Watts, Oren L. Brown, and Jeannette LoVetri. "The Visual/Kinesthetic Effects of Melodic Contour in Musical Notation as it Affects Vocal Timbre in Singers of Classical and Music Theater Repertoire." Journal of Voice 19 (2004): 441-19. "Color Music--Found Images and the Second Perfect Number." Weblog post. Ptak Science Books. 18 May 2008. 10 Nov. 2008 <color music--found images and the second perfect number.>. Deutch, Diana, John Feroe, "The Internal Representation of Pitch Sequences in Tonal Music.”Psychological Review 88 (1981): 504-522. Doleisch, Helmut. Visual Interactive Analysis Research Group. n.d. 21 Sept. 2008 http://www.vrvis.at/via/. Ellis, Willis D. A Source Book of Gestalt Psychology. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co, 1938. Hall, Manly P. "The Pythagorean Theory of Music and Color." The Secret Teachings of All Ages. 1928. 81-84.

  22. Sources Havre, Susan L, Anuj Shah, Christian Posse, et al. Diverse Information Integration and Visualization. n.d. 21 Sept. 2008 http://infoviz.pnl.gov/pdf/SPIE_proceedings_6060_22.pdf. Keller, Tanja, Peter Gerjets, Katharina Scheiter, and Barbel Garsoffky, “Information visualizations for knowledge acquisition: The impact of dimensionality and color coding.”Computers in Human Behavior 22 (2006): 43-65 Lengler, Ralph and Martin J. Eppler. A Periodic Table of Visualization Methods. n.d. 21 Sept. 2008 http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html. Li, Xuelong Li, Dacheng Tao, Stephen J. Maybank, and Yuan Yuan, “Visual music and musical vision”Neurocomputing 71 (2008): 2023-2028 Rogers, George L. "Effect of Colored Rhythmic Notation on Music-Reading Skills of Elementary Students." Journal of Research in Music Education 44 (1996): 15-25 Sahling, Gerald Nikolaus. Interactive 3D Scatterplots - From High Dimensional Data to Insight. n.d. 21 Sept. 2008 Schloss, Karen B., Partrick Lawler, and Stephen E. Palmer. "The color of music." Journal of Vision 8 (2008): 580.

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