Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making

Modern sensor technologies facilitate the measurement and interpretation of human affective and behavioural signals, and have consequently become widely used tools in the fields of affective computing, social signal processing and psychophysiology. This thesis investigates the use and development of...

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Main Author: Morgan, Evan Lloyd
Published: Queen Mary, University of London 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.701412
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7014122019-02-27T03:21:46ZInstrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music makingMorgan, Evan Lloyd2017Modern sensor technologies facilitate the measurement and interpretation of human affective and behavioural signals, and have consequently become widely used tools in the fields of affective computing, social signal processing and psychophysiology. This thesis investigates the use and development of these tools for measuring and enhancing aff ective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making. Drawing upon work in the aforementioned fields, an exploratory study is designed, where self-report and continuous behavioural and physiological measures are collected from pairs of improvising percussionists. The findings lead to the selection of gaze, motion, and cardiac activity as input measures in the design of a device to enhance affective and behavioural interaction between co-present musicians. The device provides musicians with real-time visual feedback on the glances or body motions of their co-performers, whilst also recording cardiac activity as a potential measure of musical decision making processes. Quantitative evidence is found for the effects of this device on the communicative behaviours of collaborating musicians during an experiment designed to test the device in a controlled environment. This study also reports findings on discrete and time series relationships between cardiac activity and musical decision-making. A further, qualitative study is designed to evaluate the appropriation and impact of the device during long-term use in naturalistic settings. The results provide insights into earlier findings and contribute towards an empirical understanding of affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making, as well as implications for the design and deployment of sensor-based technologies to enhance such interactions. This thesis advances the dominant single-user paradigm within human-computer interaction and affective computing research, towards multi-user scenarios, where the concern is human-human interaction. It achieves this by focusing on the emotionally rich, and under-studied context of co-present musical collaboration; contributing new methods and findings that pave the way for further research and real-world applications.781.1Queen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.701412http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/18519Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 781.1
spellingShingle 781.1
Morgan, Evan Lloyd
Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
description Modern sensor technologies facilitate the measurement and interpretation of human affective and behavioural signals, and have consequently become widely used tools in the fields of affective computing, social signal processing and psychophysiology. This thesis investigates the use and development of these tools for measuring and enhancing aff ective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making. Drawing upon work in the aforementioned fields, an exploratory study is designed, where self-report and continuous behavioural and physiological measures are collected from pairs of improvising percussionists. The findings lead to the selection of gaze, motion, and cardiac activity as input measures in the design of a device to enhance affective and behavioural interaction between co-present musicians. The device provides musicians with real-time visual feedback on the glances or body motions of their co-performers, whilst also recording cardiac activity as a potential measure of musical decision making processes. Quantitative evidence is found for the effects of this device on the communicative behaviours of collaborating musicians during an experiment designed to test the device in a controlled environment. This study also reports findings on discrete and time series relationships between cardiac activity and musical decision-making. A further, qualitative study is designed to evaluate the appropriation and impact of the device during long-term use in naturalistic settings. The results provide insights into earlier findings and contribute towards an empirical understanding of affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making, as well as implications for the design and deployment of sensor-based technologies to enhance such interactions. This thesis advances the dominant single-user paradigm within human-computer interaction and affective computing research, towards multi-user scenarios, where the concern is human-human interaction. It achieves this by focusing on the emotionally rich, and under-studied context of co-present musical collaboration; contributing new methods and findings that pave the way for further research and real-world applications.
author Morgan, Evan Lloyd
author_facet Morgan, Evan Lloyd
author_sort Morgan, Evan Lloyd
title Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
title_short Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
title_full Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
title_fullStr Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
title_full_unstemmed Instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
title_sort instrumenting the musician : measuring and enhancing affective and behavioural interaction during collaborative music making
publisher Queen Mary, University of London
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.701412
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