News

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

It has now been confirmed that the Sensing Music-related Actions project will move into new spaces in a building called Veglaboratoriet. The building, which used to house various types of chemical laboratories, is located next to the computer science building. The downside is that we will be farther away from the music department (10 minutes to walk...), but we will be one floor up from the robot lab of the ROBIN group, the partner in our new project.

The new space consists of 2 large and 3 smaller rooms, and will provide for a permanent "movement lab", an open working space for master and PhD students, as well as offices and storage. We just need to move some furniture and old light armature before we can start moving in.

 

 

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Research coordinator Anne Cathrine Wesnes shot a bunch of pictures during the "Open lab" tour we gave for new music students last week. The lab is now starting to get together, and we have decided that the official opening ceremony will be Friday 26 September 1215-1300.

 

 

 

 

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

We are happy to announce that the Swedish company Qualisys will give a demonstration of their motion capture system during our kickoff-seminar .

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Ståle and Alexander have been taking part in the development of a sensing device for the SUM project, with built-in biosensors (BVP, GSR), pressure (FSR) and a 3D accelerometer. The device is currently being used in an installation by Lars Graugaard and Bruno Herbelin at Huset in Denmark during the Re-New festival.

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

During the semester opening week, August 2009, music student Hoang Viet Phi Uy demonstrated the interactive music table he built together with Kyrre Glette during the course "Sound programming 2" at Department of Musicology, University of Oslo. The table is using computer vision software from the Reactable project.

Music Table at ZEB

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

We invite you to an Open lab at fourMs Monday 25. May 12:00 - 17:00.

Kl 12:00-15:00

Infrared motion capture

Control sound in 3D

Interactive music table

Interactive robot

3D-printing

Master student presentations

Kl 15:00-17:00

Student presentations Sound Programming 2

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Postdoctoral researcher Kyrre Glette participated in (and won!) the 64kB intro competition at the Assembly computer festival in Helsinki. A 64kB intro is an executable program in 64kB which includes realtime generation of graphics and music.

The animation includes a dancing robot, where the motion is based on data recorded with our new Qualisys infrared motion capture system.

Graphics programming done by Kim Kalland, Thomas Kristensen and Kyrre Glette. Sound programming and music by Gergely Szelei-Kis.

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Two of the student projects in the course INF3460 have been carried out in the fourMs lab this semester, and now the reports are ready: 

- Lyddør (sound door) by Maja Celine Sevaldson - Squeeze2play by Kristian Storås og Kristoffer Emil Mørch Amundsen

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Cynthia M. Grund, Network Coordinator for NNIMIPA, has posted a page with pictures and videos of the motion capture session done with American pianist William Westney during his visit to Oslo in February. There are also links to a video recording of a small discussion between Cynthia Grundt, William Westney and Alexander Refsum Jensenius on some of the topics discussed during the NNIMIPA workshop in Oslo.

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Alexander Refsum Jensenius is interviewed about the air guitar phenomenon in the program "Mozart & Madonna" at NRK P2, Wednesday 7 June 09:03-10:00.

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

Our new motion capture system is presented in the Qualisys newsletter from May. We have been working with Qualisys to create an integrated solution for handling recording and streaming of music-related body movement data, and look forward to working with the new system in the coming years!

Published July 23, 2012 3:29 PM

This week's edition of the University of Oslo newspaper Uniforum features a story called "Forskar mellom kunst og vitskap" ("Research between art and science"), highlighting the importance of interdisciplinarity in research.

The interview was made in connection with a performance of the piece Transformation at Norwegian Academy of Music a couple of weeks ago. By moving inside a seemingly empty space, the violinist slowly explores a sonic landscape of thousands of short fragments of various violin sounds. The space thus becomes a musical entity in itself, a space that the violinist both controls and interacts with at the same time. What seemed to be an empty space at first, is left as a sonic space in our memory when the piece ends.