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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.
41

A intenção na melodia: estudo interdisciplinar sobre as relações entre entoação e gênero de discurso nas manifestações vocais (da fala ao canto) / The intent on melody: interdisciplinary study about the relations between intonation and speech genre on vocal manifestations (from speech to song)

Souza, André Ricardo de 02 October 2014 (has links)
Este trabalho apresenta uma reflexão acerca da natureza da entoação e de seu papel no funcionamento e no uso da linguagem, numa perspectiva interdisciplinar que traz para a discussão as contribuições de outras áreas do conhecimento que de uma maneira ou de outra se relacionam com a expressão na fala, seja por seus aspectos físicos, acústicos, seja por seus aspectos funcionais. Apresentamos evidências e argumentos que colocam a entoação como um fator primário na comunicação linguística que tem um papel fundamental na organização e transferência da informação de um sujeito a outro, tanto do ponto de vista da produção como da recepção. A tese aqui defendida é a de que a intenção comunicativa do falante o modo como este usa a linguagem enquanto ação junto a outros seres humanos é que determina a configuração melódica, precedendo a seleção e combinação dos constituintes do enunciado. Partimos da consideração da situação atual dos estudos prosódicos com respeito à entoação que encontramos descrita em Ladd (1996), Hirst e DiCristo (1998) e Fox (2000), entre outros, e apontamos alguns dos seus principais impasses e as questões epistemológicas relacionadas. Em seguida apresentamos as perspectivas de outras áreas de fora da linguística que direta ou indiretamente se reportam à entoação, seja como intenção, como é o caso da filosofia da linguagem, a sociologia, e a teoria literária, seja como melodia nas fronteiras do fazer teatral e da prática musical. Encontramos aí aproximações significativas entre as noções de estilo e gênero do discurso e a noção de intenção comunicativa que questionam a possibilidade de uma separação estanque entre o uso prático e o uso poético, musical, artístico da linguagem. Essa constatação nos levou a considerar uma grande categoria da atividade humana que denominamos práxis vocal que inclui, além da fala e do canto mais convencionais, formas intermediárias tais como narrativas orais, chamados, pregões, discursos políticos, declamações artísticas e religiosas como o recitativo e o salmodiar, entre outras. Estas formas empregam a modulação da frequência fundamental da voz de maneiras muito particulares e podem ser situadas na fronteira entre a linguagem e a música. Empreendemos, por isso, uma investigação acerca das relações, semelhanças e diferenças entre música e linguagem. Desta aproximação surgiu uma das ideias centrais desta tese, que é a relação entre estilo melódico e gênero de discurso nas manifestações orais. Percebemos que a realização de uma intenção comunicativa, seja numa fala espontânea, num discurso ou numa canção, começa com a escolha do gênero mais adequado à expressão do conteúdo desejado, e a partir dessa escolha é que fica determinado o estilo, que corresponde às regras de elaboração do discurso (linguístico, musical ou híbrido). A violação dessas regras que observamos quando há inconsistências melódicas na fala decorada, por exemplo, são decorrentes da necessidade de se criar uma melodia a partir de um texto já dado, fato que não acontece na fala espontânea. / This work presents a reflection about the nature of intonation, and about its role in how language works and it is used, within a interdisciplinary perspective that brings contributions from other areas that, in a way or another, relate to the issue of expression in speech, whether by its physical, acoustic features or by its functional aspects. We present evidences that show intonation as a primary factor in linguistic communication, having a fundamental role in organising and transferring information from one subject to another, from the point of view of production as well as perception. The main reasoning is that the communicative intention of the speaker - the way he uses languages as an action toward other human beings - determines the melodic configuration, that preceding selection and combination of the utterance contituents. Considering the recent development of investigation of prosody as it is described in Ladd (1996), Hirst e DiCristo (1998) and Fox (2000), among others, we show some of its hindrances and the epistemological issues related to them. Following that, we present perspectives brought from other areas outside linguistics that in a direct or indirect manner relate to the issues around intonation, whether as the speaker\'s intention, as we see in the field of philosophy of language, sociology and literary theory, or as a melodic elaboration in theater and musical practices. Within these new perspectives we found out striking similarities between the concepts of style and speech genre and the idea of communicative intention, that dispute a clear distinction of the practical use of language from its poetic, musical, artistic use. This remark have led us to consider a grand category of human activity that we named vocal praxis, including, besides ordinary speech and song, intermediate forms as those found in oral narratives, callings, auctioneering, political discourses and artistic declamation such as the recitative and chant. These forms employ the modulation of the fundamental frequency of the voice in very peculiar ways, and they may be situated close to the boundaries of speech and song. For that reason we endeavoured an inquiry on relationships, similarities and differences between music and language, This approximation produced one of the central ideas of this thesis, i.e. the connection of melodic style and speech genre along the continuum of vocal (oral) manifestations. We realized that the actualization of a communicative intention, whether in spontaneous speech, in a political discourse or in a song, begins with the choice of the adequate genre to the desired expression of the content; after this choice the style is determined, leading to the rules of elaboration of the particular discourse (linguistic, musical or hybrid). The violation of these rules, that we observe as melodic incoherences when someone speaks something by heart or reading aloud, are the consequence of an artificial situation that demands creating a new melody to a given text, which doesn\'t happen in spontaneous speech.
42

Paulinho da Viola: O Caminho de volta (Um estudo poético-musical da canção popular brasileira) / Paulinho da Viola: the way back. (A study of poetic-musical Brazilian popular song)

Siqueira, Ivan Claudio Pereira 25 October 1999 (has links)
As relações entre melodia e letra são tomadas como ponto de partida para a interpretação das canções de Paulinho da Viola, um dos maiores sambistas de todos os tempos. Sua obra é analisada nos aspectos estético e sociológico, sendo vista como parte da presença histórica da arte negra na canção popular brasileira. / The relationships between melody and lyric are interpreted in Paulinho da Viola`s songs, one of the best composers of samba music. His musical work is studied on aesthetic and social aspects as part of black presence in the Brazilian popular song.
43

A melody description system for jazz improvisation

Levitt, David Alex January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1981. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ENGINEERING. / Bibliography: leaves 45-47. / by David Alex Levitt. / M.S.
44

Melodia e prosódia: um modelo para a interface música-fala com base no estudo comparado do aparelho fonador e dos instrumentos musicais reais e virtuais / Melody and prosody: discussion about the tonal melodic system of categories by investigating some of the properties that are common to both the human vocal tract and to musical instruments - real or virtual

José Roberto do Carmo Junior 19 March 2007 (has links)
O presente estudo procura reconstituir o sistema de categorias da melodia tonal a partir da investigação de algumas propriedades comuns ao aparelho fonador humano e aos instrumentos musicais reais e virtuais. Analisando essas propriedades à luz da teoria Glossemática (Hjelmslev, 1975) e da fonologia prosódica (Nespor & Vogel, 1986), a investigação chegou aos seguintes resultados: (I) dado que o sistema musical e o sistema fonológico possuem categorias comuns, pode-se sustentar a existência de um parentesco genético entre expressão verbal e expressão musical; (II) os sistemas apresentam orientações opostas: no sistema fonológico das línguas naturais, a categoria dos segmentos (ou constituintes) é relativamente expandida, enquanto a categoria dos suprasegmentos (ou caracterizantes) é concentrada. Inversamente, no sistema da melodia tonal é a categoria dos suprasegmentos que é relativamente expandida, enquanto a categoria dos segmentos é concentrada, (III) o efeito de sentido característico da melodia tonal é fruto de uma configuração sintagmática de suprasegmentos(cronemas, tonemas e dinamenas) hierarquicamente organizados; (IV) outras categorias do sistema melódico (andamento, dinâmica e timbre) ocupam um papel à parte ne hieraquia melódica e são as principais responsáveis pelas marcas deixadas no enunciado pela instância intérprete do sujeito da enunciação. / This work aims to discuss the tonal melodic system of categories by investigating some of the properties that are common to both the human vocal tract and to musical instruments - real or virtual. The analysis of these properties from the standpoint of the Glossematics theory (Hjelmslev, 1975) and of the prosodic phonology (Nespor & Vogel, 1986) led us to the following results: (I) because the music system and the phonological system comprise common categories it is possible to establish a genetic kinship between verbal and musical expression; (II) both systems present opposite properties: in the phonological system of natural languages the segmental categories (or constitutives) are relatively expanded whereas the suprasegmental categories (or characterizers) are concentrated. Conversely, in the tonal melodic system the suprasegmental categories are the ones that are relatively expanded whereas the segmental categories are concentrated; (III) the characteristic meaning effect of tonal melodies comes as a result of a hierarchly structured syntagmatic configuration of suprasegments (chronemes, tonemes, dynamenes); (IV) other categories of the melodic system (tempo, dynamics, timbre) play a distinct role in the melodic hierarchy and are the main responsible for the marks left on the text by the performer instance of the enunciation subject.
45

The processing of pitch and temporal information in relational memory for melodies

Byron, Timothy P., University of Western Sydney, College of Arts, School of Psychology January 2008 (has links)
A series of experiments investigate the roles of relational coding and expectancy in memory for melodies. The focus on memory for melodies was motivated by an argument that research on the evolutionary psychology of music cognition would be improved by further research in this area. Melody length and the use of transposition were identified in a literature review as experimental variables with the potential to shed light on the cognitive mechanisms in memory for melodies; similarly, pitch interval magnitude (PIM), melodic contour, metre, and pulse were identified as musical attributes that appear to be processed by memory for melodies. It was concluded that neither previous models of verbal short term memory (vSTM) nor previous models of memory for melodies are unable to satisfactorily explain current findings on memory for melodies. The model of relational memory for melodies that is developed here aims to explain findings from the memory for melodies literature. This model emphasises the relationship between: a) perceptual processes – specifically, a relational coding mechanism which encodes pitch and temporal information in a relational form; b) a short term store; and c) the redintegration of memory traces using schematic and veridical expectancies. The relational coding mechanism, which focuses on pitch and temporal accents (c.f., Jones, 1993), is assumed to be responsible for the salience of contour direction and note length, while the expectancy processes are assumed to be more responsible for the salience of increases in PIM or deviations from the temporal grid. Using a melody discrimination task, with key transposition within-pairs, in which melody length was manipulated, Experiments 1a, 1b, and 2 investigated the assumption that contour would be more reliant on the relational coding mechanism and PIM would be more reliant on expectancy processes. Experiment 1a confirmed this hypothesis using 8 and 16 note folk melodies. Experiment 1b used the same stimuli as Experiment 1a, except that the within-pair order was reversed in order to reduce the influence of expectancy processes. As expected, while contour was still salient under these conditions, PIM was not. Experiment 2 was similar to Experiment 1b, except that it avoided using the original melodies in same trials in order to specifically reduce the influence of veridical expectancy processes. This led to a floor effect. Overall, the results support the explanation of pitch processing in memory for melodies in the model. Experiments 3 and 4 investigated the assumption in the model that temporal processing in memory for melodies was reliant on the relational coding mechanism. Experiment 3 found that, with key transposition within-pairs, there was little difference between pulse alterations (which deviate more from the temporal grid) and metre alterations (which lengthen the note more) in short melodies, but that pulse alterations were more salient than metre alterations in long melodies. Experiment 4 showed that, with tempo transposition within-pairs, metre alterations were more salient than pulse alterations in short melodies, but that there was no difference in salience in long melodies. That metre alterations are more salient than pulse alterations in Experiment 4 strongly suggests that there is relational coding of temporal information, and that this relational coding uses note length to determine the presence of accents, as the model predicts. Experiments 5a and 5b, using a Garner interference task, transposition within-pairs, and manipulations of melody length, investigated the hypothesis derived from the model that pitch and temporal information would be integrated in the relational coding mechanism. Experiment 5b demonstrated an effect of Garner interference from pitch alterations on the discrimination of temporal alterations; Experiment 5a found a weaker effect of Garner interference from pitch alterations on the discrimination of temporal alterations. The presence of Garner interference in these tasks when there was transposition within melody pairs suggests that pitch and temporal information are integrated in the relational coding mechanism, as predicted in the model. Seven experiments therefore provide support for the assumption that a relational coding mechanism and LTM expectancies play a role in the discrimination of melodies. This has implications for other areas of research in music cognition. Firstly, theories of the evolution of music must be able to explain why features of these processing mechanisms could have evolved. Secondly, research into acquired amusia should have a greater focus on differences between perceptual, cognitive, and LTM processing. Thirdly, research into similarities between music processing and language processing would be improved by further research using PIM as a variable. / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
46

Melody spotting using hidden Markov models

Durey, Adriane Swalm 01 December 2003 (has links)
No description available.
47

Πρόγραμμα αυτόματης εναρμόνισης μελωδίας

Σφυράκης, Χαράλαμπος 22 January 2009 (has links)
Στη παρούσα διπλωματική εργασία αναπτύσσεται ένα πρόγραμμα σε Java που εναρμονίζει μία μονοφωνική ή πολυφωνική μελωδία, η οποία θα εισάγεται στο σύστημα με τη μορφή MIDI αρχείων. Η βασική τεχνική που χρησιμοποιείται είναι τα κρυμμένα μοντέλα Markov. Εισάγονται διάφορες βελτιώσεις που ενσωματώνουν γνώσεις θεωρίας μουσική στα κρυμμένα μοντέλα Μαρκόφ. Τα πειραματικά αποτελέσματα έδειξαν ότι μπορούν να βελτιώσουν την συνολική απόδοση. / In this diploma dissertation an automatic melody harmonization program is developed, written in Java. It can harmonize either a monophonic or a polyphonic melody contained in a MIDI file using the power of hidden Markov Models. We introduce several methods which incorporate musical knowledge into hidden markov models. Experiment results show higher performance in chord recognition than the initial approach.
48

Evaluation of Melody Similarity Measures

Kelly, MATTHEW 08 September 2012 (has links)
Similarity in music is a concept with significant impact on ethnomusicology studies, music recommendation systems, and music information retrieval systems such as Shazam and SoundHound. Various computer-based melody similarity measures have been proposed, but comparison and evaluation of similarity measures is inherently difficult due to the subjective and application-dependent nature of similarity in music. In this thesis, we address the diversity of the problem by defining a set of music transformations that provide the criteria for comparing and evaluating melody similarity measures. This approach provides a flexible and extensible method for characterizing selected facets of melody similarity, because the set of music transformations can be tailored to the user and to the application. We demonstrate this approach using three music transformations (transposition, tempo rescaling, and selected forms of ornamentation) to compare and evaluate several existing similarity measures, including String Edit Distance measures, Geometric measures, and N-Gram based measures. We also evaluate a newly implemented distance measure, the Beat and Direction Distance Measure, which is designed to have greater awareness of the beat hierarchy and better responsiveness to ornamentation. Training and test data is drawn from music incipits from the RISM A/II collection, and ground truth is taken from the MIREX 2005 Symbolic Melodic Similarity task. Our test results show that similarity measures that are responsive to music transformations generally have better agreement with human generated ground truth. / Thesis (Master, Computing) -- Queen's University, 2012-08-31 11:03:01.167
49

The processing of pitch and temporal information in relational memory for melodies

Byron, Timothy Patrick. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Western Sydney, 2008. / A thesis submitted to the University of Western Sydney, College of Arts, School of Psychology, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Includes bibliographical references.
50

Sbírka písní s klavírními doprovody pro první stupeň ZŠ / A collection of songs with piano accompaniment for first degree of basic schools

LOUMOVÁ, Pavlína January 2017 (has links)
In this diploma thesis, we create a collection of folk songs with piano accompaniments for primary school. The complexity of said accompaniments is offered in two versions: basic one for beginners and more advanced one for skilled piano players. This collection contains songs in major and minor key, duple and triple time.

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