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The University of New South Wales

Empirical Musicology

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Acoustics
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Production
Perception

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Background

The Empirical Musicology Group UNSW was formed in 2004 after its founders, Emery Schubert and Dorottya Fabian, received an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant for the purpose of studying emotion and expression in music using continuous response methods (2004-2008).

Since then the research group has expanded in membership to encompass both staff and research students.

Approaches

The philosophy which draws the members of the group together is that to understand music (1) it must be studied with the idea that it is listened to via the brain, rather than an object that can be understood in isolation from mental processing and (2) a variety of methodologies should be embraced, rather than the contemplations of the lone expert. For example, in our studies of baroque music performance practice, the treatises of contemporary theorists and modern day scholars are systematised and tested to see if new insights can be gleaned into what makes a piece of baroque music work aesthetically. This research also leads to specific tips about how performers can achieve particular kinds of aesthetic content, and what listeners are able to extract from the listening experience, for example, how to play dotted patterns in baroque music and how the listener perceived these patterns.

We also embrace a wide variety of methodologies such as continuous response methodology (which exploits the fact that music is necessarily a temporally dependent phenomenon). In general, we prefer to determine the response of a typical listener or performer or composer by using experimental designs and surveys, and using statistical techniques to make assertions about the typical response and the non-typical response.

We, therefore, can answer questions such as:
Which performer is the most successful at conveying a particular expressive character to the typical listener?
Are there important differences in the way that experienced and novice listeners experience music? What about the responses of expert performer?
Is one performance of a piece more preferable to the typical listener than an other? If so, why?
Is the process of composition influenced by the tools available to the composer?
Can musical features be used to predict emotional response?

We apply various methods found in science, psychology, mathematics and engineering, and believe that aesthetic and affective issues (such as emotion in music) can be studied empirically. They are not purely subjective phonomena. Active collaboration with other disciplines occurs regularly in the EM Group and seek novel ways of addressing important and interesting issues in music and music perception..

Facilities


Spaces
Electronic Music Lab
Empirical Musicology Lab
Recording Studio

Equipment
Disklavier
Baroque Bows
CD library of rare performances
Portable ARF (Audience Response Facility) - housed at MARCS Auditory Labs

Software
PsySound3
RTCRR (Beta version of 'Real Time Cognitive Response Recorder' for Mac OS X - freeware. Download latest version. Please control click and save as)
EmotionSpace Lab (Self-report emotion recording software for Mac OS 9 and earlier only - Freeware)
QMaker (in house experiment generation program)
A range of sound recording and audio analysis applications

The centrepiece infrastructure of the Empirical Musicology group is the Empirical Musicology Lab in which computer generated experiments are conducted with the aim of automating many of the tasks of data collection in music perception and composition monitoring experiments. The lab uses custom made software for collecting data, which include the Emotion Space Lab and the in-house ‘QMaker’ software. We also have access to a portable audience response tracking system called the Audience Response Facility, housed with our colleagues at MARCS Auditory Labs at the University of Western Sydney.

The Empirical Musicology Group also supports the PsySound3 project, whose purpose it is to produce an easy to use digital audio file analysis suite, allowing extraction of various musical features for further analysis and comparison. The Empirical Musicology Group uses the Electronic Music Computer Lab and the recording suite which has three studios. These spaces are used for sound recording, composition, sound editing, additional participant data collection and software development.

People

The core of the Empirical Musicology Group consists of three staff who are members of the School of English, Media and Performing Arts at UNSW.

Emery Schubert
Dorottya Fabian
John Peterson

We have a strong association with

The Music Acoustics Group

We have several students who have or are currently undertaking projects in the group:

Christopher Coady (PhD, Current) Stylistic Conventions of "Third Stream" Music
Peter Atkins (PhD, Current) Music and Spirituality
Paul Evans (Honours, 2005) Perceived and Felt Emotions, Imagined and Sounded.

Organisations within which we work or support

Australian Music and Psychology Society (AMPS)
Music, Auditory Cognition & Mind, Melbourne (MACAM)
The ARC Network in Human Communication Science (HCSNet)
The Asia-Pacific Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music (APSCOM)

Conferences at which we are likely to have a presence:

EPC
MSA
ICMPC
APSCOM
CHARM

Postgraduate Opportunities

Research
Scholarships

ARC Discovery Project: Honours and HDR Top-Ups available
ARC Discovery Project 2008-2010 (DP0879616):
Title: Artistic signatures in violin playing on sound recordings:
What makes the performance of a prominent violinist recognizable and legendary?

Yearly honours scholarships and a HDR top-up scholarship exist for  the right candidates to join the project. String players interested in empirical, data-driven research are invited to contact the Chief Investigator, Associate Professor Dorottya Fabian (d.fabian@unsw.edu.au) for further details.

Links

Australian Music and Psychology Society (AMPS)
Music, Auditory Cognition & Mind, Melbourne (MACAM)
The ARC Network in Human Communication Science (HCSNet)
The Asia-Pacific Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music (APSCOM)