Auditory Masquing : Wearable Sound Systems for Diegetic Character Voices

Alex Stahl, and Patricia Clemens

Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression

  • Year: 2010
  • Location: Sydney, Australia
  • Pages: 427–430
  • Keywords: magnetostrictive flextensional transducer,nime10,paralinguistics,sound reinforcement,spatialization,speech enhancement,transformation,voice,wearable systems
  • DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1177899 (Link to paper)
  • PDF link

Abstract:

Maintaining a sense of personal connection between increasingly synthetic performers and increasingly diffuse audiences is vital to storytelling and entertainment. Sonic intimacy is important, because voice is one of the highestbandwidth channels for expressing our real and imagined selves.New tools for highly focused spatialization could help improve acoustical clarity, encourage audience engagement, reduce noise pollution and inspire creative expression. We have a particular interest in embodied, embedded systems for vocal performance enhancement and transformation. This short paper describes work in progress on a toolkit for high-quality wearable sound suits. Design goals include tailored directionality and resonance, full bandwidth, and sensible ergonomics. Engineering details to accompany a demonstration of recent prototypes are presented, highlighting a novel magnetostrictive flextensional transducer. Based on initial observations we suggest that vocal acoustic output from the torso, and spatial perception of situated low frequency sources, are two areas deserving greater attention and further study.

Citation:

Alex Stahl, and Patricia Clemens. 2010. Auditory Masquing : Wearable Sound Systems for Diegetic Character Voices. Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1177899

BibTeX Entry:

  @inproceedings{Stahl2010,
 abstract = {Maintaining a sense of personal connection between increasingly synthetic performers and increasingly diffuse audiences is vital to storytelling and entertainment. Sonic intimacy is important, because voice is one of the highestbandwidth channels for expressing our real and imagined selves.New tools for highly focused spatialization could help improve acoustical clarity, encourage audience engagement, reduce noise pollution and inspire creative expression. We have a particular interest in embodied, embedded systems for vocal performance enhancement and transformation. This short paper describes work in progress on a toolkit for high-quality wearable sound suits. Design goals include tailored directionality and resonance, full bandwidth, and sensible ergonomics. Engineering details to accompany a demonstration of recent prototypes are presented, highlighting a novel magnetostrictive flextensional transducer. Based on initial observations we suggest that vocal acoustic output from the torso, and spatial perception of situated low frequency sources, are two areas deserving greater attention and further study.},
 address = {Sydney, Australia},
 author = {Stahl, Alex and Clemens, Patricia},
 booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression},
 doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1177899},
 issn = {2220-4806},
 keywords = {magnetostrictive flextensional transducer,nime10,paralinguistics,sound reinforcement,spatialization,speech enhancement,transformation,voice,wearable systems},
 pages = {427--430},
 title = {Auditory Masquing : Wearable Sound Systems for Diegetic Character Voices},
 url = {http://www.nime.org/proceedings/2010/nime2010_427.pdf},
 year = {2010}
}