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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
131

En tång blev till sång : En studie i fenomenet interpretation

Hultén, Ingegerd January 2012 (has links)
Denna studie har som syfte att synliggöra, beskriva och reflektera kring de faktorer som konstituerar fenomenet interpretationsprocess. För att spegla fenomenet från två håll genomförs två interpretationer av en grafiskt noterad solosång, och för att kunna kvalitetsbeskriva förloppen i denna praktikbaserade studie, används en metod där interpreten pendlar mellan rollen som praktiker och forskare, och reflekterar i och över handling.         I förhållande till text och notation har den ena interpretationsprocessen sin utgångspunkt i sångarens livsvärld samt dennes tolkning av några symboler, medan den andra tar sin utgångspunkt i sångarens upplevelse av några bilmekanikers livsvärldar, samt deras tolkningar av samma symboler. Som metodisk grund används fenomenologin, vars två grundläggande teser är: en vändning mot sakerna, samt en följsamhet mot sakerna. Det som undersöks är interpretens erfarenheter och det sätt på vilket fenomenet interpretationsprocess framträder, och både verbala samt klingande exempel på denna levda och upplevda erfarenhet redovisas. Resultatet jämförs även med tidigare forskning inom liknande områden.         Resultatet visar att några av de centrala faktorer som konstituerar de båda interpretations-processerna är textanalysens (i vid bemärkelse) betydelse, närvaron av publikframförande- och kommunikationstanken, växlingen mellan praktik och reflektion, samt det egna skapandets omfattning och karaktär. Tolkningen av den verbala texten samt notationen utgjorde stommen för vad som skulle kommuniceras, och tankarna på en närvarande publik påverkade både instrumentet och själva tolkningen. Interpretations-processen präglades i hög grad av en växelverkan mellan praktiskt musicerande och reflektion, och av pendlandet mellan del och helhet, förförståelse och förståelse. Interpreten fungerade i hög grad som medkompositör, och skapandet präglades av både spontanitet och övervägda val.         Interpretens olika val och ställningstaganden speglas i de klingande gestaltningar som återfinns på skivan.
132

Adaptive optical music recognition

Fujinaga, Ichiro. January 1996 (has links)
The basic goal of the Adaptive Optical Music Recognition system presented herein is to create an adaptive software for the recognition of musical notation. The focus of this research has been to create a robust framework upon which a practical optical music recognizer can be built. / The strength of this system is its ability to learn new music symbols and handwritten notations. It also continually improves its accuracy in recognizing these objects by adjusting internal parameters. Given the wide range of music notation styles, these are essential characteristics of a music recognizer. / The implementation of the adaptive system is based on exemplar-based incremental learning, analogous to the idea of "learning by example," that identifies unknown objects by their similarity to one or more of the known stored examples. The entire process is based on two simple, yet powerful algorithms: k-nearest neighbour classifier and genetic algorithm. Using these algorithms, the system is designed to increase its accuracy over time as more data are processed.
133

Kine ti um : an architectonic artefact

Pflumm, Bernd A. January 1996 (has links)
The aim of this creative project is the search for an alternative path of spatial understanding and the implementation of an complementary way that seeks to communicate new spatial ideas in the real of architecture.By introducing the hypothesis of a consolidated unit that consists of the triptych space, movement and the perceiving human being, one is necessary to create a media that can potentially help the expression of multidimensional structures.For this purpose dance is introduced in the field of architecture. Choreography and movement notation are structured and interpreted in order to inform the field of architecture on a theoretical as well as on a practical level.By analyzing components of dance, useful elements that can help to "render" architectural ideas can be identified.The second part of this thesis project, provides a way of how to implement the unit space, movement and the perceiving human being, into the field of architecture. A synthesis of elements existing both in the field of architecture and dance, constitute the base for an architectonic artefact. The introduction of an artefact as such, "moves" beyond the expected understanding of architectural space, commonly portrayed as something static and absolute, while it offers new possibilities to spatial perception. / Department of Architecture
134

Theoretical Treatments of the Semiminim in a Changing Notational World c. 1315-c. 1440

Cook, Karen M January 2012 (has links)
<p>A semiminim is typically defined as a note value worth half a minim, usually drawn as a flagged or colored minim. That definition is one according to which generations of scholars have constructed chronologies and provenances for fourteenth- and fifteenth-century music and the people who created it. `Semiminims' that do not match this definition are often portrayed in modern scholarship as anomalous, or early prototypes, or evidence of poor education, or as peculiarities of individual preference. My intensive survey of the extant theoretical literature from the earliest days of the Ars Nova through c. 1440 reveals how the conceptualization and codification of notation occurred in different places according to different fundamental principles, resulting not in one semiminim but a plethora of related small note values. These phenomena were dynamic and unstable, and a close study of them helps to clarify a range of historical issues. Localized traditions have often been strictly bounded in scholarly literature; references to French, Italian, and English notation are commonplace. I explain notational preferences in Italy, England, central Europe, and the rest of western Europe with regard to these small note values but demonstrate that theorists educated in each of these places routinely incorporated portions of other traditions. This process began long before the `ars subtilior,' dating at least to the time of Franco of Cologne. Rarely were regional traditions truly isolated; the various aspects of semiminim-family note values were debated and adapted for decades across these cultural and geographical boundaries. The central theme of my research is to show how and why the theoretical conceptualization of these myriad small note values is key to understanding the continual merging of these local preferences into a more amalgamated style of notation by the mid-fifteenth century.</p> / Dissertation
135

The effects of instrumental training on the music notation reading abilities of high school choral musicians

Klemp, Barbara A., January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (D.M.A.)--Rutgers University, 2010. / "Graduate Program in Music Education." Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-118).
136

Workflow- und Prozeßsynchronisation mit Interaktionsausdrücken und -graphen

Heinlein, Christian, January 2000 (has links)
Ulm, Univ., Diss., 2000.
137

Additions in arithmetic, 1483-1700, to the sources of Cajoris̓ "History of mathematical notations" and Tropfkes̓ "Geschichte der Elementar-Mathematik,"

Schulte, Mary Leontius, January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Michigan, 1935. / Bibliography: p. 79-99.
138

An experimental study of the perceptibility and spacing of music symbols

Wheelwright, Lorin Farrar, January 1939 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1939. / Vita. Published also as Teachers college, Columbia university, Contributions to education, no. 775. Music tests, etc.: [30] p. (variously paged). Bibliography: p. 106-108.
139

"Pro sonorum diversitate vel novitate" : the singing of scripture in the Hispano-Visigothic votive masses /

Nadeau, Nils Andre. January 2000 (has links)
Diss.--Philosophie--Ithaca, N.Y.--Cornell Univ., 1998. / Bibliogr. p. 249-262.
140

Real-Time Composer-Performer Collaboration As Explored In Wilderness, A Dance And Audio Installation

January 2012 (has links)
abstract: From fall 2010 to spring 2011, the author was the pianist in twenty public performances of Wilderness, a site-adaptable dance and audio installation by choreographer Yanira Castro and composer Stephan Moore. Wilderness's music was generated as the result of an algorithmic treatment of data collected from the movements of both dancers and audience members within the performance space. The immediacy of using movement to instantaneously generate sounds resulted in the need for a real-time notational environment inhabited by a sight-reading musician. Wilderness provided the author the opportunity to extensively explore an extreme sight-reading environment, as well as the experience of playing guided improvisations over existing materials while incorporating lateral thinking strategies, resulting from a real-time collaboration between composer and performer during the course of a live performance. This paper describes Wilderness in detail with particular attention focused on aspects of the work that most directly affect the pianist: the work's real-time notational system, live interaction between composer and performer, and the freedoms and limitations of guided improvisation. There is a significant amount of multi-media documentation of Wilderness available online, and the reader is directed toward this online content in the paper's appendix. / Dissertation/Thesis / D.M.A. Music 2012

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