Difference between revisions of "Colloquium"

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@5:30pm in the Classroom!
+
@5:30pm in the Classroom on Wednesdays!
  
=Spring Quarter=
+
The CCRMA Colloquium is a weekly gathering of CCRMA students, faculty, staff, and guests. It is an opportunity for members of the CCRMA community and invited speakers to share the work that they are doing in the fields of Computer Music, Audio Signal Processing and Music Information Retrieval, Psychoacoustics, and related fields.  The colloquium typically happens every Wednesday during the academic year from 5:30 - 7:00pm and meets in the CCRMA Classroom, Knoll 217, unless otherwise noted.
  
* '''4/5: Internal Colloquium'''
+
The colloquium team for 2020-2021 is:<br />
** speaker 1: Blair Kaneshiro - Large-Scale Music Discovery
+
Barbara Nerness - bnerness@ccrma.stanford.edu <br />
** speaker 2:
+
Kunwoo Kim - kunwoo@ccrma.stanford.edu <br />
** speaker 3:
+
Mike Mulshine - mrmulshine@ccrma.stanford.edu <br />
 +
Camille Noufi - cnoufi@ccrma.stanford.edu <br />
 +
<br />
  
* '''4/12: Shanghai Conservatory'''
+
*Note: the colloquium will not be held every Wednesday this year (20-21), please keep an eye on the notification e-mails for the dates.
  
* '''4/19: Roddy Lindsay'''
+
= Winter Quarter (2021)=
  
* '''4/26: Natasha Barrett'''
+
* 1/13: Break
 +
* '''1/20: Informal Hangout / Dance Party
 +
* '''1/27:
 +
* '''2/03:
 +
* '''2/10: CCRMA Town !!
 +
*'''2/17: Rapid-Fire Talks''' (5 min) - sign up here via your CCRMA login
 +
** Speaker 1: Kunwoo Kim
 +
** Speaker 2: John Chowning
 +
** Speaker 3: Noah Fram
 +
** Speaker 4: Camille Noufi
 +
** Speaker 5: Barbara Nerness
 +
** Speaker 6: (maybe) Julie Zhu
 +
** Speaker 7: Chris Chafe
 +
** Speaker 8: Lloyd May
 +
** Speaker 9: Mike Mulshine
 +
** Speaker 10: Ge Wang
 +
** Speaker 11: Jatin (hopefully)
 +
** Speaker 12: Alex Chechile
 +
** Speaker 13: Fernando Lopez-Lezcano
 +
** Speaker 14:
 +
** Speaker 15:
 +
* '''2/24:
 +
* '''3/03: Conference Style Talks''' (15-20 min) - sign up here via your CCRMA login
 +
** Speaker 1: Ty Sadlier
 +
** Speaker 2: Travis Skare (hopefully)
 +
** Speaker 3: Constantin Basica & Prateek Verma
 +
** Speaker 4:
 +
* '''3/10: Sasha Leitman
 +
* '''3/17: Break
  
* '''5/3: Andrew Schloss'''
+
= Spring Quarter (2021)=
  
* '''5/10: Rapid Fire Talks'''
+
Schedule TBD. Dates will be posted here as soon as they are planned.
** speaker 1: lonce
+
** speaker 2:
+
** speaker 3:
+
** speaker 4:
+
** speaker 5:
+
** speaker 6:
+
** speaker 7:
+
** speaker 8:
+
** speaker 9:
+
** speaker 10:
+
** speaker 11:
+
** speaker 12:
+
  
  
* '''5/17: Bryan Jacobs'''
+
= Past - Autumn Quarter (2020)=
 +
<span style="color:red">'''In person colloquiua will not be held for the 2020 Autumn Quarter. All events will be held remotely.
  
* '''5/24: Internal Colloquium'''
+
*'''9/16 New Student Introductions'''
** speaker 1:  
+
** Speaker 1: Lloyd May
** speaker 2:  
+
** Speaker 2: Andrew Zhu
** speaker 3:  
+
** Speaker 3: Kathleen Yuan
 +
** Speaker 4: Marise van Zyl
 +
** Speaker 5: Hannah Choi
 +
** Speaker 6: Joss Saltzman
 +
** Speaker 7: Champ Darabundit
 +
** Speaker 8: Clara Allison
 +
** Speaker 9: David Braun
 +
** Speaker 10: Austin Zambito-Valente
  
* '''5/31: '''
+
*'''9/23 Faculty/Staff Introductions'''
 +
**Speaker 1: Jonathan Berger
 +
** Speaker 2: Ge Wang
 +
** Speaker 3: Takako Fujioka
 +
** Speaker 4: Seán O Dalaigh (new DMA)
 +
** Speaker 5: Eleanor Selfridge-Field
 +
** Speaker 6: Craig Stuart Sapp
 +
** Speaker 7: Blair Kaneshiro
  
* '''6/7: '''
+
*'''9/30 Faculty/Staff Introductions'''
 +
** Speaker 1: Patricia Alessandrini (via video)
 +
** Speaker 2: Julius Smith
 +
** Speaker 3: Marina Bosi
 +
** Speaker 4: Nando (aka Fernando Lopez-Lezcano)
 +
** Speaker 5: Stephanie Sherriff
 +
** Speaker 6: Constantin Basica
 +
** Speaker 7: Matt Wright
 +
** Speaker 8: Chris Chafe
  
=Winter Quarter=
+
*10/7 - Break
  
* '''1/11: Internal Colloquium'''
+
*'''10/14 - Town Hall'''
** speaker 1: Nolan Lem -
+
** speaker 2: Servio
+
** speaker 3:
+
  
* '''1/18: Julia Talk'''
+
*'''10/21 - Adjunct Faculty Talks'''
 +
** Speaker 1: Malcolm Slaney
 +
** Speaker 2: Poppy Crum
 +
** Speaker 3: Paul Demarinis
 +
** Speaker 4: Jonathan Abel
 +
** Speaker 5: Doug James
  
* '''1/25: Rapid Fire Talks''':
+
*11/4 - Break
** speaker 1: Romain Michon
+
** speaker 2: Julius Smith
+
** speaker 3: Eoin
+
** speaker 4: Chris C
+
** speaker 5: Madeline Huberth
+
** speaker 6: Lonce Wyse
+
** speaker 7: Jack Atherton
+
** speaker 8: Irán Román
+
** speaker 9: Matt Wright
+
** speaker 10: Elliot Kermit Canfield-Dafilou
+
** speaker 11: Nette Worthey
+
** speaker 12:
+
** speaker 13:
+
** speaker 14:
+
** speaker 15:
+
** speaker 16:
+
** speaker 17:
+
** speaker 18:
+
** speaker 19:
+
** speaker 20:
+
  
* '''2/1: Vibeke Sorensen'''
+
*'''11/11 - [https://www.justinsalamon.com/ Justin Salamon (Adobe / NYU)] [https://vimeo.com/480670893 (Watch Again)]'''
  
* '''2/8: Adrian Freed'''
+
*'''11/18 - Mona Shahnavaz'''
  
* '''2/15: Maneesh Agrawala'''
+
ABSTRACT & BIO:
 +
Mona is an enthusiastic musician, whose focus and passion has been to
 +
share the joy of music with others. In 2018, a successful outcome of
 +
her innovative music program designed for senior citizens was the
 +
turning point for her to decide to change the course of learning piano
 +
in a less complex route. Her engineering background helped her to
 +
start working on the idea that bridges the gap between music and
 +
technology.
  
* '''2/22: Tom Rossing'''
+
The approach to fingering in music has always been and still is one of
 +
the major elements of success for keyboard players. Correct fingering
 +
assists the performer in delivering a better technical and musical
 +
performance. This research presents the best technique to generate
 +
fingering for any sequence of music notes. Dynamic programming and
 +
mathematics are major parts of this paper, they work alongside rules
 +
set by pianists to calculate the most practical fingerings for any
 +
musical passage.
  
* '''3/1: Internal Colloquium'''
+
The ultimate goal is to facilitate the process of playing the piano
** speaker 1: Fernando Lopez-Lezcano, topic to be determined
+
using an AR platform. This is helpful for scaling music instructors
** speaker 2: Romain Michon
+
and allows for efficient teaching. Through solving this problem,
** speaker 3: Jonathan Abel
+
virtual instructions would be more productive and impactful. Success
 +
of this research applied in the AR field can be applied to robotic
 +
tasks in educational programs, video games, and medical fields.
  
* '''3/8: '''
+
*11/25 - THANKSGIVING WEEK - Break
 
+
* '''3/15: Ali Momeni'''
+
 
+
= Fall Quarter =
+
 
+
* '''9/28: New Student Presentations''' (Elliot)
+
** Speaker 1: Yuval Adler, about "Being Brave and Signing Up to Be the First Speaker"
+
** Speaker 2: Chris Lortie
+
** Speaker 3: Juan Sierra, not sure about what but I'll figure it out
+
** Speaker 4: Mark Hertensteiner, "Omnisonnace (working title): a music RPG"
+
** Speaker 5: Megan Jurek
+
** Speaker 6: Mark Rau
+
** Speaker 7: Julie Herndon
+
** Speaker 8: Yijun Zhou, "Global Net Orchestra Drum Circle"
+
** Speaker 9: Rahul Agnihotri, "I Know Nothing, But I Will!"
+
** Speaker 10: Ruoxi Zhang
+
** Speaker 11: Mu-Heng Yang, "MIR using Deep Learning"
+
** Speaker 12: Orchisama Das, "HUMs and other such things"
+
** Speaker 13: Walker Davis
+
** Speaker 14: Davor Branimir Vincze "Inflection Point"
+
** Speaker 15: Prateek Murgai "My Journey"
+
** Speaker 16: Jack Atherton
+
** Speaker 17:
+
** Speaker 18:
+
** Speaker 19:
+
 
+
* '''10/5 Ge Wang and Chris Chafe:''' (Kitty)
+
 
+
* '''10/12: Fernando Lopez Lezcano and Julius Smith''' (Alex)
+
 
+
* '''10/19: Rapid fire talks''' (Iran)
+
** Speaker 1: Romain Michon
+
** Speaker 2: Paul Batchelor
+
** Speaker 3: Elliot Kermit-Canfield
+
** Speaker 4: Nolan Lem
+
** Speaker 5: Aury Washburn
+
** Speaker 6: Alex Chechile
+
** Speaker 7: Nick Gang
+
** Speaker 8: Chryssie Nanou
+
** Speaker 9: Byron Walker
+
** Speaker 10: Carlos Sánchez
+
** Speaker 11: Kurt Werner
+
** Speaker 12: Matt Wright
+
** Speaker 13: Michael Olsen
+
** Speaker 14: Sara Martín
+
** Speaker 15: Möbius Román
+
** Speaker 16: Christopher Jette
+
 
+
* '''10/26: no colloquium'''
+
 
+
* '''11/2: Øyvind Brandtsegg'''
+
 
+
* '''11/9: Jarek Kapuscinski and Matt Wright'''
+
 
+
* '''11/16: Tom Rossing and Jay LeBoeuf''' (Madeline)
+
 
+
* '''Thanksgiving'''
+
 
+
* '''11/30: Sasha Leitman and Takako Fuijoka''' (Madeline)
+
 
+
* '''12/7: Craig Sapp, and Eleanor Selfridge-Field''' (Elliot)
+

Revision as of 21:22, 17 February 2021

@5:30pm in the Classroom on Wednesdays!

The CCRMA Colloquium is a weekly gathering of CCRMA students, faculty, staff, and guests. It is an opportunity for members of the CCRMA community and invited speakers to share the work that they are doing in the fields of Computer Music, Audio Signal Processing and Music Information Retrieval, Psychoacoustics, and related fields. The colloquium typically happens every Wednesday during the academic year from 5:30 - 7:00pm and meets in the CCRMA Classroom, Knoll 217, unless otherwise noted.

The colloquium team for 2020-2021 is:
Barbara Nerness - bnerness@ccrma.stanford.edu
Kunwoo Kim - kunwoo@ccrma.stanford.edu
Mike Mulshine - mrmulshine@ccrma.stanford.edu
Camille Noufi - cnoufi@ccrma.stanford.edu

  • Note: the colloquium will not be held every Wednesday this year (20-21), please keep an eye on the notification e-mails for the dates.

Winter Quarter (2021)

  • 1/13: Break
  • 1/20: Informal Hangout / Dance Party
  • 1/27:
  • 2/03:
  • 2/10: CCRMA Town !!
  • 2/17: Rapid-Fire Talks (5 min) - sign up here via your CCRMA login
    • Speaker 1: Kunwoo Kim
    • Speaker 2: John Chowning
    • Speaker 3: Noah Fram
    • Speaker 4: Camille Noufi
    • Speaker 5: Barbara Nerness
    • Speaker 6: (maybe) Julie Zhu
    • Speaker 7: Chris Chafe
    • Speaker 8: Lloyd May
    • Speaker 9: Mike Mulshine
    • Speaker 10: Ge Wang
    • Speaker 11: Jatin (hopefully)
    • Speaker 12: Alex Chechile
    • Speaker 13: Fernando Lopez-Lezcano
    • Speaker 14:
    • Speaker 15:
  • 2/24:
  • 3/03: Conference Style Talks (15-20 min) - sign up here via your CCRMA login
    • Speaker 1: Ty Sadlier
    • Speaker 2: Travis Skare (hopefully)
    • Speaker 3: Constantin Basica & Prateek Verma
    • Speaker 4:
  • 3/10: Sasha Leitman
  • 3/17: Break

Spring Quarter (2021)

Schedule TBD. Dates will be posted here as soon as they are planned.


Past - Autumn Quarter (2020)

In person colloquiua will not be held for the 2020 Autumn Quarter. All events will be held remotely.

  • 9/16 New Student Introductions
    • Speaker 1: Lloyd May
    • Speaker 2: Andrew Zhu
    • Speaker 3: Kathleen Yuan
    • Speaker 4: Marise van Zyl
    • Speaker 5: Hannah Choi
    • Speaker 6: Joss Saltzman
    • Speaker 7: Champ Darabundit
    • Speaker 8: Clara Allison
    • Speaker 9: David Braun
    • Speaker 10: Austin Zambito-Valente
  • 9/23 Faculty/Staff Introductions
    • Speaker 1: Jonathan Berger
    • Speaker 2: Ge Wang
    • Speaker 3: Takako Fujioka
    • Speaker 4: Seán O Dalaigh (new DMA)
    • Speaker 5: Eleanor Selfridge-Field
    • Speaker 6: Craig Stuart Sapp
    • Speaker 7: Blair Kaneshiro
  • 9/30 Faculty/Staff Introductions
    • Speaker 1: Patricia Alessandrini (via video)
    • Speaker 2: Julius Smith
    • Speaker 3: Marina Bosi
    • Speaker 4: Nando (aka Fernando Lopez-Lezcano)
    • Speaker 5: Stephanie Sherriff
    • Speaker 6: Constantin Basica
    • Speaker 7: Matt Wright
    • Speaker 8: Chris Chafe
  • 10/7 - Break
  • 10/14 - Town Hall
  • 10/21 - Adjunct Faculty Talks
    • Speaker 1: Malcolm Slaney
    • Speaker 2: Poppy Crum
    • Speaker 3: Paul Demarinis
    • Speaker 4: Jonathan Abel
    • Speaker 5: Doug James
  • 11/4 - Break
  • 11/18 - Mona Shahnavaz

ABSTRACT & BIO: Mona is an enthusiastic musician, whose focus and passion has been to share the joy of music with others. In 2018, a successful outcome of her innovative music program designed for senior citizens was the turning point for her to decide to change the course of learning piano in a less complex route. Her engineering background helped her to start working on the idea that bridges the gap between music and technology.

The approach to fingering in music has always been and still is one of the major elements of success for keyboard players. Correct fingering assists the performer in delivering a better technical and musical performance. This research presents the best technique to generate fingering for any sequence of music notes. Dynamic programming and mathematics are major parts of this paper, they work alongside rules set by pianists to calculate the most practical fingerings for any musical passage.

The ultimate goal is to facilitate the process of playing the piano using an AR platform. This is helpful for scaling music instructors and allows for efficient teaching. Through solving this problem, virtual instructions would be more productive and impactful. Success of this research applied in the AR field can be applied to robotic tasks in educational programs, video games, and medical fields.

  • 11/25 - THANKSGIVING WEEK - Break