Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems

This thesis suggests a new model of human-machine interaction in the domain of non-idiomatic musical improvisation. Musical results are viewed as emergent phenomena issuing from complex internal systems behaviour in relation to input from a single human performer. We investigate the prospect of rewa...

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Main Author: Beyls, Peter F. E.
Published: University of Plymouth 2009
Subjects:
780
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.510611
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5106112015-03-20T03:50:37ZMusic as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systemsBeyls, Peter F. E.2009This thesis suggests a new model of human-machine interaction in the domain of non-idiomatic musical improvisation. Musical results are viewed as emergent phenomena issuing from complex internal systems behaviour in relation to input from a single human performer. We investigate the prospect of rewarding interaction whereby a system modifies itself in coherent though non-trivial ways as a result of exposure to a human interactor. In addition, we explore whether such interactions can be sustained over extended time spans. These objectives translate into four criteria for evaluation; maximisation of human influence, blending of human and machine influence in the creation of machine responses, the maintenance of independent machine motivations in order to support machine autonomy and finally, a combination of global emergent behaviour and variable behaviour in the long run. Our implementation is heavily inspired by ideas and engineering approaches from the discipline of Artificial Life. However, we also address a collection of representative existing systems from the field of interactive composing, some of which are implemented using techniques of conventional Artificial Intelligence. All systems serve as a contextual background and comparative framework helping the assessment of the work reported here. This thesis advocates a networked model incorporating functionality for listening, playing and the synthesis of machine motivations. The latter incorporate dynamic relationships instructing the machine to either integrate with a musical context suggested by the human performer or, in contrast, perform as an individual musical character irrespective of context. Techniques of evolutionary computing are used to optimise system components over time. Evolution proceeds based on an implicit fitness measure; the melodic distance between consecutive musical statements made by human and machine in relation to the currently prevailing machine motivation. A substantial number of systematic experiments reveal complex emergent behaviour inside and between the various systems modules. Music scores document how global systems behaviour is rendered into actual musical output. The concluding chapter offers evidence of how the research criteria were accomplished and proposes recommendations for future research.780University of Plymouthhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.510611http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/872Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 780
spellingShingle 780
Beyls, Peter F. E.
Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
description This thesis suggests a new model of human-machine interaction in the domain of non-idiomatic musical improvisation. Musical results are viewed as emergent phenomena issuing from complex internal systems behaviour in relation to input from a single human performer. We investigate the prospect of rewarding interaction whereby a system modifies itself in coherent though non-trivial ways as a result of exposure to a human interactor. In addition, we explore whether such interactions can be sustained over extended time spans. These objectives translate into four criteria for evaluation; maximisation of human influence, blending of human and machine influence in the creation of machine responses, the maintenance of independent machine motivations in order to support machine autonomy and finally, a combination of global emergent behaviour and variable behaviour in the long run. Our implementation is heavily inspired by ideas and engineering approaches from the discipline of Artificial Life. However, we also address a collection of representative existing systems from the field of interactive composing, some of which are implemented using techniques of conventional Artificial Intelligence. All systems serve as a contextual background and comparative framework helping the assessment of the work reported here. This thesis advocates a networked model incorporating functionality for listening, playing and the synthesis of machine motivations. The latter incorporate dynamic relationships instructing the machine to either integrate with a musical context suggested by the human performer or, in contrast, perform as an individual musical character irrespective of context. Techniques of evolutionary computing are used to optimise system components over time. Evolution proceeds based on an implicit fitness measure; the melodic distance between consecutive musical statements made by human and machine in relation to the currently prevailing machine motivation. A substantial number of systematic experiments reveal complex emergent behaviour inside and between the various systems modules. Music scores document how global systems behaviour is rendered into actual musical output. The concluding chapter offers evidence of how the research criteria were accomplished and proposes recommendations for future research.
author Beyls, Peter F. E.
author_facet Beyls, Peter F. E.
author_sort Beyls, Peter F. E.
title Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
title_short Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
title_full Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
title_fullStr Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
title_full_unstemmed Music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
title_sort music as complex emergent behaviour : an approach to interactive music systems
publisher University of Plymouth
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.510611
work_keys_str_mv AT beylspeterfe musicascomplexemergentbehaviouranapproachtointeractivemusicsystems
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