scholarly journals Analysis of Musical Content in Digital Audio

Author(s):  
Simon Dixon

Automatic analysis of digital audio with musical content is a difficult — but important — task for various applications in computer music, audio compression, and music information retrieval. This chapter contains a brief review of audio analysis as it relates to music, followed by three case studies of recently developed systems which analyse specific aspects of music. The first system is BeatRoot, a beat tracking system that finds the temporal location of musical beats in an audio recording, analogous to the way that people tap their feet in time to music. The second system is JTranscriber, an interactive automatic transcription system, which recognises musical notes and converts them into MIDI format allowing interactive monitoring and correction of the extracted MIDI data via a multimedia interface. The third system is the Performance Worm, a real time system for visualisation of musical expression, which presents in real time a two-dimensional animation of variations in tempo and loudness.

Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergio Barrios-dV ◽  
Michel Lopez-Franco ◽  
Jorge D. Rios ◽  
Nancy Arana-Daniel ◽  
Carlos Lopez-Franco ◽  
...  

This paper presents a path planning and trajectory tracking system for a BlueBotics Shrimp III®, which is an articulate mobile robot for rough terrain navigation. The system includes a decentralized neural inverse optimal controller, an inverse kinematic model, and a path-planning algorithm. The motor control is obtained based on a discrete-time recurrent high order neural network trained with an extended Kalman filter, and an inverse optimal controller designed without solving the Hamilton Jacobi Bellman equation. To operate the whole system in a real-time application, a Xilinx Zynq® System on Chip (SoC) is used. This implementation allows for a good performance and fast calculations in real-time, in a way that the robot can explore and navigate autonomously in unstructured environments. Therefore, this paper presents the design and implementation of a real-time system for robot navigation that integrates, in a Xilinx Zynq® System on Chip, algorithms of neural control, image processing, path planning, and inverse kinematics and trajectory tracking.


Author(s):  
J. Navya Sree ◽  
C. Mounika1 ◽  
T. Mamatha ◽  
B. Sreekanth ◽  
N. Diwakar1 ◽  
...  

This paper proposes a smart application for College Bus Tracking System, which runs on Android smart phone. This enables students to find out the location of the bus so that they will not get late or will not arrive at the stop too early. The main purpose of this application is to provide exact location of the student’s respective buses and providing information like bus details etc. This application may be widely used by the college students since Android smart phones have become common and affordable for all. It is a real time system as the current location of the bus is updated every moment in the form of latitude and longitude, which is received by the students


Author(s):  
Simon Dixon

The last decade has seen a revolution in the use of digital audio: The CD, which one decade earlier had taken over the home audio market, is starting to be replaced by electronic media which are distributed over the Internet and stored on computers or portable devices in compressed formats. The need has arisen for software to manage and manipulate the gigabytes of data in these music collections, and with the continual increase in computer speed, memory and disk storage capacity, the development of many previously infeasible applications has become possible. This article provides a brief review of automatic analysis of digital audio recordings with musical content, a rapidly expanding research area which finds numerous applications. One application area is the field of music information retrieval, where content-based indexing, classification and retrieval of audio data are needed in order to manage multimedia databases and libraries, as well as being useful in music retailing and commercial information services. Another application area is music software for the home and studio, where automatic beat tracking and transcription of music are much desired goals. In systematic musicology, audio analysis algorithms are being used in the study of expressive interpretation of music. Other emerging applications which make use of audio analysis are music recommender systems, playlist generators, visualisation systems, and software for automatic synchronisation of audio with other media and/or devices. We illustrate recent developments with three case studies of systems which analyse specific aspects of music (Dixon, 2004). The first system is BeatRoot (Dixon, 2001a, 2001c), a beat tracking system that finds the temporal location of musical beats in an audio recording, analogous to the way that people tap their feet in time to music. The second system is JTranscriber, an interactive automatic transcription system based on (Dixon, 2000a, 2000b), which recognizes musical notes and converts them into MIDI format, displaying the audio data as a spectrogram with the MIDI data overlaid in piano roll notation, and allowing interactive monitoring and correction of the extracted MIDI data. The third system is the Performance Worm (Dixon, Goebl, & Widmer, 2002), a real-time system for visualisation of musical expression, which presents in real time a two dimensional animation of variations in tempo and loudness (Langner & Goebl, 2002, 2003). Space does not permit the description of the many other music content analysis applications, such as: audio fingerprinting, where recordings can be uniquely identified with a high degree of accuracy, even with poor sound quality and in noisy environments (Wang, 2003); music summarisation, where important parts of songs such as choruses are identified automatically; instrument identification, using machine learning techniques to classify sounds by their source instruments; and melody and bass line extraction, essential components of query-by-example systems, where music databases can be searched by singing or whistling a small part of the desired piece. At the end of the article, we discuss emerging and future trends and research opportunities in audio content analysis.


The development of surveillance systems for indoor and outdoor environments using currently available wireless sensor technology without violating privacy issues is a challenging task. Passive Infrared (PIR) detectors are suitable for such systems provided solutions to the technical limitations are implemented. In the proposed work, the development of a human tracking system using analogue PIR detectors and currently available wireless sensor technology is presented. Performance is evaluated by conducting real-time tests in different environmental scenarios. Analysis of experimentalresults of human sensing signals indicates that performance is affected by environmental parameters. These findings will be helpful for the researchers while implementing a real-time system in the field


2012 ◽  
Vol 605-607 ◽  
pp. 1391-1394
Author(s):  
Youngouk Kim ◽  
Sewoong Jun

This paper presents a new real-time system to acquire motion information of human articulated objects such as arm and head. The system does not need any marker or device to wear on human body and adopted stereo camera to obtain robust system against for illumination and complex background without position initialization of articulated objects. We present a solution to estimate self-occluded body objects when human model behaves normal action towards the camera. The main idea of the solution is to apply a component labeling techniques on sliced disparity map, and found the arm position when the arm is located in front of basis distance of body and we could also found arm location when the arm is located on the basis distance with Morphological methods. From this approach, we can obtain the full body shape considering self-occlusion. It is simple and fast in comparison with other methods which satisfy real-time performance and accuracy of object tracking at the same time.


2011 ◽  
Vol 403-408 ◽  
pp. 2723-2727
Author(s):  
Feng Li ◽  
Yi Feng Zou ◽  
He Qin Zhou ◽  
Guan Jun Pei

The detection of pedestrian which has been widely used in digital surveillance systems is a popular topic in computer vision. This paper mainly discusses a system of pedestrian detection in video sequences captured from a stationary camera hanging in a public scene. We describe an efficient system combining background subtraction based on Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) and object classification based on Histograms of Oriented Gradients (HOG). We first process moving objects segmentation using GMM. Then a HOG detector is used to classify the moving objects into person and none-person. Experimental results on video sequences have demonstrated that the real-time tracking system can process 15 to 30 frames per second robustly with a high accuracy.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-41
Author(s):  
Rivan Risdaryanto ◽  
Houtman P. Siregar ◽  
Dedy Loebis

The real-time system is now used on many fields, such as telecommunication, military, information system, evenmedical to get information quickly, on time and accurate. Needless to say, a real-time system will always considerthe performance time. In our application, we define the time target/deadline, so that the system should execute thewhole tasks under predefined deadline. However, if the system failed to finish the tasks, it will lead to fatal failure.In other words, if the system cannot be executed on time, it will affect the subsequent tasks. In this paper, wepropose a real-time system for sending data to find effectiveness and efficiency. Sending data process will beconstructed in MATLAB and sending data process has a time target as when data will send.


Vestnik MEI ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 73-78
Author(s):  
Igor В. Fominykh ◽  
◽  
Sergey V. Romanchuk ◽  
Nikolay Р. Alekseev ◽  
◽  
...  

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