1995 HCI95 Music paper.pdf (87.47 kB)
Can we use music in computer-human communication?
online resource
posted on 2008-05-28, 11:47 authored by James L. AltyThe audio channel has been somewhat neglected in Human Computer Interface
Design. It is a powerful channel which offers processing options often of a
complementary nature to the visual channel. Music makes the most complex and
sophisticated use of this channel and has well-organised techniques and structures
for disambiguating parallel time-dependent events. This paper examines the
contribution music might make to interface design and reports on some
preliminary investigations, which indicate that there does seem to be a prima facie
case for examining the subject further.
History
School
- Science
Department
- Computer Science
Citation
ALTY, J.L., 1995. Can we use music in computer-human communication? IN: Kirby, M.A.R., Dix, A.J., and Finlay, J.E. (eds.). People and Computers X. Proceedings of HCI 95. Cambridge University Press : Cambridge, pp. 409-423Publisher
© Cambridge University PressPublication date
1995Notes
This is a conference paper. The definitive version was published by Cambridge University Press (http://www.cambridge.org/uk/)ISBN
0521567297Language
- en