Tidligere arrangementer - Side 7
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Julian Fuhrer from RITMO on the brain's encoding of structure in random stimuli
Welcome to this seminar, where Danica Kragic, Professor at the School of Computer Science and Communication at the Royal Institute of Technology, KTH, will talk about human action modelling and human-robot collaboration.
A two-day workshop on music making with collections of sounds using machine listening and learning
We wish to invite you to an open midway assessment for our PhD fellow in musicology, Martin Pleiss.
To comment on the candidate's work, we have invited Dr. Komarine Romdenh-Romluc of The University of Sheffield.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Kyrre Glette from RITMO on embodied AI in robots.
Birgitte Stougaard Pedersen, Associate Professor at Aarhus University, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Benedikte Wallace from RITMO on art generated by AI.
We wish to invite you to an open midway assessment for our PhD fellow in musicology, Dana Swarbrick.
To comment on the candidate's work, we have invited Professor Tuomas Eerola of Durham University.
Master Guilherme Schmidt C?mara at the Department of musicology will defend his dissertation Timing Is Everything . . . Or Is It? Investigating Timing and Sound Interactions in the Performance of Groove-Based Microrhythm for the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD).
Master Maja Dyhre Foldal at the Department of Psychology will defend her dissertation: Perceiving temporal structure in auditory stimuli: The role of attention and prediction or the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD).
Keynote at RPPW2021: "Mapping between sound, brain and behavior for understanding musical meter"
A network performance between Oslo, Stockholm, and Berlin during RPPW 2021. Three musicians explore a shared physical-virtual stage using motion capture and spatial audio.
Fibres Out of Line is an interactive art installation and performance. The installation consists of 10 autonomous musical robots. Jennifer Gerry will improvise a ?10 minute dance performance with the robots during the performance. Jennifer is in California, while the robots are in Oslo. Both Jen and the Robots will join a Zoom session to see, hear, and respond to one another.
Keynote at RPPW2021: "In the wake of Henry Shaffer"
This workshop brings together researchers from a range of disciplines together to engage in discussions about the scientific study of rhythm.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Guilherme Schmidt C?mara from RITMO on strategies for mapping timing and intensity in drum-kit performance.
MIRAGE Symposium Special Food & Paper will be given by Emilia Gomez (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) on TROMPA project.
The 1st MIRAGE Symposium took place on 8-9 June, 2021, but continues online: all videos are available and the discussion can continue on Slack.
The symposium is organised in the context of the MIRAGE project (RITMO, in collaboration with the National Library of Norway's Digital Humanities Laboratory).
Day 1: Video, YouTube link.
Day 2: Video, YouTube link.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Jo Thori Lind, professor of economics at the University of Oslo, about a topic we should all care about: Publication quantity (and, by extension, quality).
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Henrik Herrebr?den, PhD Fellow at RITMO, on the effect of auditory distractions on motor performance.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Balandino Di Donato (University of Leicester) on Human-Sound Interaction.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Ulf Holbrook (RITMO) on objects and structures.
This week's Food & Paper will be given by Paul Remache (Universidad de Málaga) on Haptic Stimuli.
In this Food & Paper, Merve Akca (RITMO) will report from the article “No Evidence for an Auditory Attentional Blink for Voices Regardless of Musical Expertise”, published in Frontiers in Psychology in January 2020. Aside from the methodology and the findings of the article, she will be linking these to topics of discussion, drawing from evolutionary psychology to cognitive neuroscience of voice recognition.