33 results match your criteria: "University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna[Affiliation]"

Ensemble musicians typically exchange visual cues to coordinate piece entrances. "Cueing-in" gestures indicate when to begin playing and at what tempo. This study investigated how timing information is encoded in musicians' cueing-in gestures.

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This study investigates the production and perception of timing, synchronisation and dynamics in jazz trio performances. In a production experiment, six trio combinations of one saxophonist, two bassists, and three drummers were recorded while they performed three popular jazz songs. Onset timing and dynamics of each performer were extracted and analysed.

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Communication for coordination: gesture kinematics and conventionality affect synchronization success in piano duos.

Psychol Res

November 2018

Department of Music Acoustics-Wiener Klangstil (IWK), University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna, Anton-von-Webern-Platz 1, 1030, Vienna, Austria.

Ensemble musicians often exchange visual cues in the form of body gestures (e.g., rhythmic head nods) to help coordinate piece entrances.

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Reconstruction of piano hammer force from string velocity.

J Acoust Soc Am

November 2016

Institute of Music Acoustics, University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna, Anton-von-Webern-Platz 1, 1030 Vienna, Austria.

A method is presented for reconstructing piano hammer forces through appropriate filtering of the measured string velocity. The filter design is based on the analysis of the pulses generated by the hammer blow and propagating along the string. In the five lowest octaves, the hammer force is reconstructed by considering two waves only: the incoming wave from the hammer and its first reflection at the front end.

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Perception of touch quality in piano tones.

J Acoust Soc Am

November 2014

Schulich School of Music, McGill University, 555 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1E3, Canada.

Both timbre and dynamics of isolated piano tones are determined exclusively by the speed with which the hammer hits the strings. This physical view has been challenged by pianists who emphasize the importance of the way the keyboard is touched. This article presents empirical evidence from two perception experiments showing that touch-dependent sound components make sounds with identical hammer velocities but produced with different touch forms clearly distinguishable.

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Context-specific effects of musical expertise on audiovisual integration.

Front Psychol

October 2014

Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (OFAI) Vienna, Austria ; Institute of Music Acoustics, University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna Vienna, Austria.

Ensemble musicians exchange auditory and visual signals that can facilitate interpersonal synchronization. Musical expertise improves how precisely auditory and visual signals are perceptually integrated and increases sensitivity to asynchrony between them. Whether expertise improves sensitivity to audiovisual asynchrony in all instrumental contexts or only in those using sound-producing gestures that are within an observer's own motor repertoire is unclear.

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This paper investigates the production and perception of different articulation techniques on the saxophone. In a production experiment, two melodies were recorded that required different effectors to play the tones (tongue-only actions, finger-only actions, combined tongue and finger actions) at three different tempi. A sensor saxophone reed was developed to monitor tongue-reed interactions during performance.

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Skilled piano performance requires considerable movement control to accomplish the high levels of timing and force precision common among professional musicians, who acquire piano technique over decades of practice. Finger movement efficiency in particular is an important factor when pianists perform at very fast tempi. We document the finger movement kinematics of highly skilled pianists as they performed a five-finger melody at very fast tempi.

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