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Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics

CCRMA Seeks Facilities Specialist

Happy late summer to all! The staff at CCRMA are *elated* to announce that we are searching for a new person to join our team. Please feel free to ask questions of any of us about the position.

Detailed job posting and application can be found here: https://careersearch.stanford.edu/jobs/facilities-specialist-1-on-site-2...

COVID Policies

See CCRMA's COVID policies for 2023.

CCRMA WAVE (Wall for AudioVisual Expression) presents

Victoria Shen: Latent Memories

January 9 - April 2 [EXTENDED]

Upcoming Events

Robotic Hearing Systems for Autonomous Vehicles

Date: 
Fri, 10/27/2023 - 10:30am - 12:00pm
Location: 
CCRMA Seminar Room
Event Type: 
Hearing Seminar
 Xuan Zhong will discuss the issues in building Robotic Hearing Systems for Autonomous Vehicles.

Details to follow.

FREE
Open to the Public
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Recent Events

EXPLORING APPROACHES TO MULTI-TASK AUTOMATIC SYNTHESIZER PROGRAMMING

Date: 
Mon, 08/21/2023 - 3:30pm - 4:30pm
Location: 
Classroom
Event Type: 
Guest Lecture
Daniel Faronbi (NYU) joins us to talk about his recent ICASSP paper

Automatic Synthesizer Programming is the task of transform-
ing an audio signal that was generated from a virtual instru-
ment, into the parameters of a sound synthesizer that would
generate this signal. In the past, this could only be done for
one virtual instrument. In this paper, we expand the current
literature by exploring approaches to automatic synthesizer
programming for multiple virtual instruments. Two different
approaches to multi-task automatic synthesizer programming
are presented. We find that the joint-decoder approach per-
forms best. We also evaluate the performance of this model
FREE
Open to the Public

Retrieving musical information from neural data: how cognitive features enrich acoustic ones

Date: 
Fri, 08/18/2023 - 3:30pm - 4:30pm
Location: 
Classroom
Event Type: 
Guest Lecture
Ellie Abrams (NYU) joins us to talk about her recent ISMIR paper

Various features, from low-level acoustics, to higher-level
statistical regularities, to memory associations, contribute
to the experience of musical enjoyment and pleasure. Re-
cent work suggests that musical surprisal, that is, the un-
expectedness of a musical event given its context, may di-
rectly predict listeners’ experiences of pleasure and enjoy-
ment during music listening. Understanding how surprisal
shapes listeners’ preferences for certain musical pieces has
implications for music recommender systems, which are
typically content- (both acoustic or semantic) or metadata-
FREE
Open to the Public

Insights into Soundscape Synthesis and Energy consumption of Sound Event Detection systems

Date: 
Thu, 08/17/2023 - 10:00am - 11:00am
Location: 
Classroom
Event Type: 
Guest Lecture
Francesca Ronchini (Politecnico di Milano) joins us to discuss her PhD research:
FREE
Open to the Public

The Sound of AI Accelerator

Date: 
Wed, 08/16/2023 - 11:00am - 12:00pm
Location: 
Classroom
Event Type: 
Guest Lecture
"The Sound of AI Accelerator: From Idea to Music AI Startup"
Are you interested in starting a music AI company? In this talk, Valerio will introduce The Sound of AI Accelerator, the first startup accelerator focused on music, audio, and voice AI.
FREE
Open to the Public
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Recent News

Hearables Will Monitor Your Brain and Body to Augment Your Life, by Poppy Crum

Poppy Crum recently published a fascinating article in IEEE's magazine Spectrum on the potential future of wearables/hearables.

Quote from the article:

ARTFUL DESIGN — A new (comic) book by Ge Wang!


What is the nature of design, and the meaning it holds in human life? What does it mean to design well -- to design ethically? How can the shaping of technology reflect our values as human beings?  These are the questions addressed in Ge Wang's new book, ARTFUL DESIGN (check it out: https://artful.design/).

Technology that Knows What You're Feeling: TED2018 Talk Featuring Dr. Poppy Crum

Very interesting talk by Poppy Crum:

What happens when technology knows more about us than we do? Poppy Crum studies how we express emotions -- and she suggests the end of the poker face is near, as new tech makes it easy to see the signals that give away how we're feeling. In a talk and demo, she shows how "empathetic technology" can read physical signals like body temperature and the chemical composition of our breath to inform on our emotional state. For better or for worse. "If we recognize the power of becoming technological empaths, we get this opportunity where technology can help us bridge the emotional and cognitive divide," Crum says.

CCRMA's SLOrk Featured in Wired Magazine

The Aural Magic of Stanford's Laptop Orchestra



CCRMA: Award-winning Faculty!

Please join us in contratulating Dr. Poppy Crum upon receiving two recent awards! Her work on tech industry standards, particularly focusing on improving hearing aid technology, and her leadership as a women in the tech world have been recognized by the Consumer Technology Association and the Advanced Imaging Society. Links to articles are below.

Way to go, Poppy!

CTA Honors Five for Outstanding Contributions to Tech Industry Initiatives and Standards
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Fall Courses at CCRMA

Music 101 Introduction to Creating Electronic Sounds
Music 192A Foundations in Sound Recording Technology
Music 201 CCRMA Colloquium
Music 220A Foundations of Computer-Generated Sound
Music 223A Composing Electronic Sound Poetry
Music 256A Music, Computing, and Design I: Software Paradigms for Computer Music
Music 319 Research Seminar on Computational Models of Sound Perception
Music 320 Introduction to Audio Signal Processing
Music 351A Research Seminar in Music Perception and Cognition I
Music 423 Graduate Research in Music Technology
Music 451A Auditory EEG Research I

 

 

 

   

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Department of Music
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