Nettsider med emneord «music»
The next Nordic Sounds meeting will be an informal workshop where research group participants can come together to discuss critical themes and issues related to ongoing research on music in the Nordic countries.
Unfortunately this event has been cancelled. We will meet again in September.
A Study Day co-hosted by IASPM Norden & Nordic Sounds
All are invited to the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM Norden) Study Day at the Department of Musicology, University of Oslo on September 14 2017.
The theme of the day is the study of popular music in the Nordic countries. Professor Stan Hawkins will introduce the event, which is co- hosted by our department’s Nordic Sounds: Critical Music Research Group.
Welcome to the opening conference of RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time and Motion. Lectures, panels, music and party!
Videos are visual to start with, but they can be easier to understand if they are visualized. In this talk Alexander Refsum Jensenius will present some of his tools for creating alternative visualizations of video files.
A concert and demo session of new musical works for unconventional technologies developed at UiO. Come and try out a muscle controlled musical instrument, join an iPad-ensemble, or participate in social-media music making!
The goal of the innovation project SoundTracer is to develop an app for searching in large music libraries through moving a mobile phone in the air.
This project investigates the rhythm and temporality of experiences characterised by deep engagement and/or absorption.
How does rhythmic interaction with music and other people contribute to social processes and outcomes?
"Biophysical Music" is volume 1 of the new concept "MusicLab", a series of events exploring the science of music from different perspectives. The idea is to mix research and edutainment through hands-on workshops, intellectual warm-ups, performances and data jockeying.
An intensive PhD-level training course on sound and motion analysis with experts in sound and music computing from the Nordic countries.
The Nordic Sound and Music Computing Network (NordicSMC) is a network project aimed at developing sound and music computing research excellence in the Nordic countries.
A workshop for exploring advanced methods for capturing and analysing human music-related motion.
Artistic research fellow at the Norwegian Academy of Music Victoria Johnson and fourMs-researcher Alexander Refsum Jensenius will perform a piece exploring improvisation in time and space during a concert that also features pieces by Henrik Hellstenius and Peter Tornquist.
Johnson and Jensenius have been collaborating for several years on exploration of various types of technologies for musical expression. The piece currently presented is based on video analysis using modules from the Musical Gestures Toolbox in Jamoma and CataRT .
Research fellow Kristian Nymoen will defend his dissertation on Friday 25 January 2013.
Methods and Technologies for Analysing Links Between Musical Sound and Body Motion
Solveig Aasen (IFIKK) and Kai Olav Ellefsen/Jim Tørresen (IFI) will present some of their latest research in music, dance, movement, robotics and health applications.
Tor Endestad will present the research of the FRONT neurolab in the Department of Psychology.
An overview of eye tracking as research method and how it is used by some UiO researchers.
Alexander Refsum Jensenius, Victor Sanchez and Agata Zelechowska will present the new MICRO project.
Presentation of our new researchers (Jonna Vuoskoski, Olivier Lartillot, Georgios Sioros) and a quick demonstration of our new Delsys EMG system.
Presentations on film editing (Einar Egeland) and sports sonification (Henrik Herrebrøden).
Pritty and Patrick Patel-Grosz (Linguistics) and Bruno Laeng (Psychology) will present some of their latest research.