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Bishop, Laura & Kwak, Dongho
(2024).
Ignoring a noisy metronome during dyadic drumming.
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Bishop, Laura & D'Amario, Sara
(2024).
Methods tracking four-hand piano performances
.
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D'Amario, Sara & Bishop, Laura
(2024).
Self-Reported Experiences of Musical Togetherness in Music Ensembles.
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D'Amario, Sara & Bishop, Laura
(2024).
Self-Reported Experiences of Musical Togetherness in Music Ensembles.
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Bishop, Laura; H?ffding, Simon; Laeng, Bruno & Lartillot, Olivier
(2023).
Mental effort and expressive interaction in expert and student string quartet performance.
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Bishop, Laura & Upham, Finn
(2023).
Bodies in Concert.
Show summary
Increasingly, research on music performance is moving out of controlled laboratory settings and into concert halls, where there are opportunities to explore how performance unfolds in high-arousal conditions and how performers and audiences interact. In this session, we will present findings from a series of live research concerts that we carried out with the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra. The orchestra performed the same program of classical repertoire for four audiences of schoolchildren and an audience of families. Orchestra members wore sensors that collected cardiac activity, respiration, and body motion data, and the conductor additionally wore a full-body motion capture suit and eye-tracking glasses. Audience members in some of the concerts were invited to wear reflective wristbands, and wristband motion was captured using infrared video recording. We will begin the session with a discussion of the scientific and methodological challenges that arose during the project, in particular relating to the large scale of data capture (>50 musicians and hundreds of audience members), the visible nature of research that is carried out on a concert stage, and the development of procedures for aligning data from different recording modalities. Next, we will present findings from two lines of analysis that investigate different aspects of behavioural and physiological coordination within the orchestra. One analysis investigates the effects of audience noise and musical roles on coherence in (i) cardiac rate and variability and (ii) respiratory phase and rate. The second analysis investigates the effects of musical demands on synchronization of body sway, bowing, and respiration in string sections. We will conclude the session with an open discussion of how live concert research might be optimized.
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Martin, Remy Richard; Cross, Ian; Upham, Finn; Bishop, Laura; S?rb?, Solveig & ?land, Frederik
(2023).
What can one learn from more naturalistic concert research?
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Riaz, Maham; Upham, Finn; Burnim, Kayla; Bishop, Laura & Jensenius, Alexander Refsum
(2023).
Comparing inertial motion sensors for capturing human micromotion.
Show summary
The paper presents a study of the noise level of accelerometer data from a mobile phone compared to three commercially available IMU-based devices (AX3, Equivital, and Movesense) and a marker-based infrared motion capture system (Qualisys). The sensors are compared in static positions and for measuring human micromotion, with larger motion sequences as reference. The measurements show that all but one of the IMU-based devices capture motion with an accuracy and precision that is far below human micromotion. However, their data and representations differ, so care should be taken when comparing data between devices.
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Bishop, Laura; Niemand, Anna Maria; D'Amario, Sara & Goebl, Werner
(2023).
Coordinated head motion predicts cognitive effort and experiences of musical togetherness in singing-piano duos.
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Bishop, Laura; H?ffding, Simon; Lartillot, Olivier Serge Gabriel & Laeng, Bruno
(2023).
Mental effort and expressive interaction in expert and student string quartet performance.
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Bishop, Laura; Bonnin, Geoffray & Frey, Jeremy
(2023).
Analyzing physiological data collected during music listening: An introduction.
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D'Amario, Sara; Ternstr?m, Sten; Goebl, Werner & Bishop, Laura
(2023).
Impact of singing togetherness and task complexity on choristers' body motion.
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Herrebr?den, Henrik; Espeseth, Thomas & Bishop, Laura
(2023).
Cognitive load affects effort, performance, and kinematics in elite and non-elite rowers.
Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology (JSEP).
ISSN 0895-2779.
45(S1),
p. S83–S83.
doi:
10.1123/jsep.2023-0077.
Show summary
The extent to which elite athletes depend on mental effort and attention to task execution has been a debated topic. Some studies have suggested that motor experts might be relatively unaffected in the face of distraction and that they might even perform better when they attend to extraneous cognitive stimuli (for example in a dual-task paradigm), as compared to single-task conditions where they concentrate fully on a sports task. However, task complexity and participants’ skill levels have so far been relatively modest in most dual-task studies. To address gaps in past research, a multi-method study was conducted using a rowing ergometer task. Participants were nine male elite rowers from the Norwegian national rowing team, preparing for the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, as well as nine male recreational rowers. Participants engaged in three-minute rowing trials of varying task demands, including single-task conditions (focusing on rowing only) and dual-task conditions (focusing on rowing and solving arithmetic problems). Performance and mental effort were measured via ergometer data (i.e., rowing speed values) and eye-tracking measures (i.e., blink rates and pupil size measurements), respectively. Movement kinematics was measured by motion capture technology. The results suggested that adding extraneous cognitive load led to performance decline and increased mental effort across all participants. Both elites and non-elites demonstrated kinematic changes when going from single-task to dual-task performance. That is, kinematic events in participants’ lower-body and upper-body segments became more temporally coupled, and more in line with movement patterns associated with novice athletes when the extraneous cognitive load was added. This study contradicts several past findings and suggests that elite athletes rely on attentional resources to execute fundamental aspects of their performance. Funding source: Research Council of Norway.
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Akca, Merve; Bishop, Laura; Vuoskoski, Jonna Katariina & Laeng, Bruno
(2022).
Tracing the Temporal Limits of Auditory Information Processing with Pupillometry.
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Bishop, Laura
(2022).
Emergent coordination of ancillary gestures motivates musical and interperformer engagement during group music-making.
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Bishop, Laura & Laeng, Bruno
(2022).
Expertise modulates the relationship between musical demands and mental effort.
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Bishop, Laura
(2022).
Intersubjectivity and musical togetherness: What is the overlap?
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Bishop, Laura
(2022).
Attention focus affects togetherness and body interactivity in piano duos.
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Bishop, Laura
(2022).
Shared attention and shared expressive goals affect classical piano duos' playing quality and experiences of togetherness.
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Krzyzaniak, Michael Joseph & Bishop, Laura
(2022).
Professor Plucky—Expressive body motion in human- robot musical ensembles.
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Bishop, Laura & Goebl, Werner
(2021).
Shaping musical ensemble performance: How ensemble musicians come up with a shared interpretation.
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Bishop, Laura & Goebl, Werner
(2021).
Togetherness in expressive musical interaction: Effects of social presence on head motion, gaze, and arousal.
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Bishop, Laura; Gonzalez Sanchez, Victor Evaristo; Laeng, Bruno; Jensenius, Alexander Refsum & H?ffding, Simon
(2021).
Social context affects head motion and gaze in string quartet rehearsal and concert performance.
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Bishop, Laura
(2021).
Musical togetherness: The social and artistic rewards of ensemble playing.
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Smetana, Monika; Bishop, Laura & Stepniczka, Irene
(2020).
Dialogue in music therapy piano partner-play improvisations: First results from an exploratory feasibility study.
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Stepniczka, Irene; Bishop, Laura & Smetana, Monika
(2020).
Meaningful situations during “partner-play” improvisations: A feasibility study applying a mixed methods approach.
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Bishop, Laura & Jensenius, Alexander Refsum
(2020).
Reliability of two infrared motion capture systems in a music performance setting.
Show summary
This paper describes a comparative analysis of tracking quality in two infrared marker-based motion capture systems: one older but high-end (Qualisys, purchased in 2009) and the other newer and mid-range (OptiTrack, purchased in 2019). We recorded performances by a string quartet with both systems simultaneously, using the same frame rate. Our recording set-up included a combination of moving markers (affixed to musicians’ bodies) and stationary markers (affixed to music stands). Higher noise levels were observed in Qualisys recordings of stationary markers than in OptiTrack recordings, as well as a greater spatial range, though OptiTrack recordings had a higher rate of outliers (“spikes” in the signal). In moving markers, increased quantity of motion was associated with increased between-system error rates. Both systems showed minimal within-trial drift but a reduction in recording accuracy and precision over the duration of the experiment. Overall, our results show that the older/high-end system (Qualisys) produced slightly lower-quality recordings than the newer/mid-range system (OptiTrack). We discuss how our findings may inform researchers’ interpretations of motion capture data, particularly when capturing the types of motion that are important for performing music.