Making Grains Tangible: Microtouch for Microsound

Staas de Jong

Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression

  • Year: 2011
  • Location: Oslo, Norway
  • Pages: 326–328
  • Keywords: and others,and today granular,barry truax,curtis roads,granular sound synthesis,instrumental control,tangible display,tangible manipulation
  • DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1178055 (Link to paper)
  • PDF link

Abstract:

This paper proposes a new research direction for the large family of instrumental musical interfaces where sound is generated using digital granular synthesis, and where interaction and control involve the (fine) operation of stiff, flat contact surfaces. First, within a historical context, a general absence of, and clear need for, tangible output that is dynamically instantiated by the grain-generating process itself is identified. Second, to fill this gap, a concrete general approach is proposed based on the careful construction of non-vibratory and vibratory force pulses, in a one-to-one relationship with sonic grains.An informal pilot psychophysics experiment initiating the approach was conducted, which took into account the two main cases for applying forces to the human skin: perpendicular, and lateral. Initial results indicate that the force pulse approach can enable perceivably multidimensional, tangible display of the ongoing grain-generating process. Moreover, it was found that this can be made to meaningfully happen (in real time) in the same timescale of basic sonic grain generation. This is not a trivial property, and provides an important and positive fundament for further developing this type of enhanced display. It also leads to the exciting prospect of making arbitrary sonic grains actual physical manipulanda.

Citation:

Staas de Jong. 2011. Making Grains Tangible: Microtouch for Microsound. Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1178055

BibTeX Entry:

  @inproceedings{DeJong2011,
 abstract = {This paper proposes a new research direction for the large family of instrumental musical interfaces where sound is generated using digital granular synthesis, and where interaction and control involve the (fine) operation of stiff, flat contact surfaces. First, within a historical context, a general absence of, and clear need for, tangible output that is dynamically instantiated by the grain-generating process itself is identified. Second, to fill this gap, a concrete general approach is proposed based on the careful construction of non-vibratory and vibratory force pulses, in a one-to-one relationship with sonic grains.An informal pilot psychophysics experiment initiating the approach was conducted, which took into account the two main cases for applying forces to the human skin: perpendicular, and lateral. Initial results indicate that the force pulse approach can enable perceivably multidimensional, tangible display of the ongoing grain-generating process. Moreover, it was found that this can be made to meaningfully happen (in real time) in the same timescale of basic sonic grain generation. This is not a trivial property, and provides an important and positive fundament for further developing this type of enhanced display. It also leads to the exciting prospect of making arbitrary sonic grains actual physical manipulanda. },
 address = {Oslo, Norway},
 author = {de Jong, Staas},
 booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression},
 doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1178055},
 issn = {2220-4806},
 keywords = {and others,and today granular,barry truax,curtis roads,granular sound synthesis,instrumental control,tangible display,tangible manipulation},
 pages = {326--328},
 title = {Making Grains Tangible: Microtouch for Microsound},
 url = {http://www.nime.org/proceedings/2011/nime2011_326.pdf},
 year = {2011}
}