TY - BOOK
T1 - Music Similarity: Concepts, Cognition and Computation
AU - Chew, Elaine
A2 - Volk, Anja
A2 - Margulis, Elizabeth
A2 - Anagnostopoulou, Christina
PY - 2016/9/29
Y1 - 2016/9/29
N2 - This special issue dedicated to the topic of music similarity is a follow-up to the workshop ‘Music Similarity: Concepts, Cognition and Computation’, which was held at the Lorentz Center, International center for scientific workshops in Leiden, the Netherlands, 19–25 January 2015. The Lorentz workshop brought together 55 experts on music similarity from Computer Science, Musicology and Music Cognition in order to discuss cross-disciplinary strategies on the theoretical and computational modelling of music similarity. Main areas addressed during the workshop considered similarity computing, perception and cognition of similarity, similarity in music content (music analysis) and similarity in music expression. Participants discussed achievements, challenges and future goals of music similarity research for different aspects such as pattern extraction and similarity, processes of categorization, similarity across modalities, similarity and expressive performance, large-scale music similarity, similarity and style, salience and variation, similarity in composition, similarity in timbre, harmonic similarity, similarity and memory, and evaluation and similarity. The papers of this issue span the main areas of the workshop, namely similarity computing, perception and cognition of similarity, similarity in music content (music analysis) and similarity in music expression.
AB - This special issue dedicated to the topic of music similarity is a follow-up to the workshop ‘Music Similarity: Concepts, Cognition and Computation’, which was held at the Lorentz Center, International center for scientific workshops in Leiden, the Netherlands, 19–25 January 2015. The Lorentz workshop brought together 55 experts on music similarity from Computer Science, Musicology and Music Cognition in order to discuss cross-disciplinary strategies on the theoretical and computational modelling of music similarity. Main areas addressed during the workshop considered similarity computing, perception and cognition of similarity, similarity in music content (music analysis) and similarity in music expression. Participants discussed achievements, challenges and future goals of music similarity research for different aspects such as pattern extraction and similarity, processes of categorization, similarity across modalities, similarity and expressive performance, large-scale music similarity, similarity and style, salience and variation, similarity in composition, similarity in timbre, harmonic similarity, similarity and memory, and evaluation and similarity. The papers of this issue span the main areas of the workshop, namely similarity computing, perception and cognition of similarity, similarity in music content (music analysis) and similarity in music expression.
KW - music
KW - similarity
KW - music information research
KW - computational
M3 - Book
SN - 0929-8215
VL - 45
T3 - JOURNAL OF NEW MUSIC RESEARCH
BT - Music Similarity: Concepts, Cognition and Computation
PB - Taylor Francis
T2 - Music Similarity: Concepts, Cognition and Computation
Y2 - 19 January 2015 through 23 January 2015
ER -