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What does a black hole sound like? Neil deGrasse Tyson & Chuck Nice explore the sounds of the universe using JWST and Chandra X-Ray Observatory data with astrophysicist and data sonification expert Kimberly Arcand, Live at Guild Hall. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free.Thanks to our Patrons Deb, Linda Gibson, Dominic Hamken, JTsolept, Eric Sharakan, Rick Wallingford, Douglas Waltz, RT, Cristina, Lorraine Wright, Paul Deis, Diane Lapick, Dr. Staci Gruber, James Dorrough, Edward Bornman, GLENNA F MONTGOMERY, and David Martin for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
Get to know our friends and collaborators, Miriam Quick and Duncan Geere — the hosts of Loud Numbers, a data sonification podcast.How do data visualization and sonification differ? What are the possibilities and pitfalls? And how can you incorporate the practice into your life?— — —Hear the entire conversation wherever you get podcasts — join our community at patreon.com/futureecologies— — —Haven't heard our own data sonification yet? That's in Spiders Song (Part 2)
Zen travels to San Diego to meet Aura Walmer, a researcher who experiments with blending her passions and talent in both art & music to revolutionize the ways we compile, share, and ultimately understand complex data. Art IG: @artbyauraMusic IG: @songsbyauraWebsite: https://aurawalmer.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzUij975_vda6icm8SxdImgSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/0DsVwLcjVcQ047DEVjFQg2?si=wA4Vx1yKRKiWpt17Hi4w7QGitHub: https://github.com/awalmerReddit: https://www.reddit.com/user/rogrtheshrubber/Pinterest: https://pin.it/3HPf5Ss"I am passionate about drawing associations across these fields that I love, and cultivating a holistic life path. I hope to grow away from the pressure to compartmentalize these pursuits, to place them in defined boxes or identities. Recently, I have found compelling links across these interests, manifesting in areas such as acoustic ecology, data journalism and sonification, album artwork, the union of nature field recordings and music… the list goes on. (Sound, and art, and data — oh, my!) I am keen on continuing these explorations, and aspire to work and grow as a freelance artist, data scientist / researcher, and musician." -Aura Support the showIntrospective interviews with artistic individuals - an ongoing audiovisual journal of Zen Perry. Behold a wall of periodically updated webpages!Official Website: https://www.zenperryproject.com/Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/breakingnorthInstagram: @https://www.instagram.com/zenperryproject/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/breakingnorthpodcastTwitter: @BreakingNorthTwitch: https://www.twitch.tv/breakingnorth_Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@zenperryproject160Email: info@zenperryproject.comThanks for listening - hope you enjoy!
Dentro de todo proyecto, uno de los puntos más importantes, y en el que siempre hacemos hincapié, es en el de la representación de los datos. En este podcast ya hemos escrito sobre algunas de las herramientas relevantes en lo que a visualización de datos se refiere. Pero, ¿sabías que también existe la posibilidad de representar los datos a través del sonido? Para que nos cuente un poco más sobre este tema, tenemos a Sara Lenzi, investigadora en el ámbito del sonido e Inteligencia Artificial y experta en Data Sonification.
Through 2022 co-hosts Scott Miller and Juanita Fox will talk with experts who are developing or offering innovative and emerging products that can help us live with purpose. In episode #15 Scott and Juanita talk with Hugh McGrory, the co-founder of Sonify. During the podcast Hugh explains how sound and music can help us understand data in new ways. We created the pdf, 5 Opportunities of Data Sonification, based on the conversation with Hugh: https://rb.gy/0puez5 Because we found the conversation with Hugh so fascinating, we have the unedited version of the conversation hosted as well titled "S3 Hugh McGrory Full Interview" that you can find: https://rb.gy/bxutp3.
As part of our ongoing data sonification series, three new images have now been released.
A new trio of examples of 'data sonification' from NASA missions provides a new method to enjoy an arrangement of cosmic objects.
By turning Chandra, Hubble, and Spitzer images into sounds, a new project allows users to 'listen' to the center of the Milky Way and other objects.
Brant Guichard has heard The Music for as long as he can remember.
Brant Guichard has heard The Music for as long as he can remember.
Fans of All In The Mind might enjoy this new podcast from the ABC! Sum of All Parts tells extraordinary stories from the world of numbers. Like this story, about a young man with an unusual type of epilepsy, where he hears what are called ‘musical auras' whenever he has a seizure.
Two Trains tells the story of income inequality along the New York City 2 Train.
Brant Guichard has heard The Music for as long as he can remember.
For the most part, when people think of crunching numbers, they imagine charts and graphs. Today on the podcast, we’re exploring unusual ways to look at—or rather, listen to—data. Sound can perhaps present information with more urgency and clarity than a visualization. Since this is Foreign Affairs, and we’re nottracking u-boats underwater, we decided to apply the data sonification technique to some somewhat obscure data sets - including the Cheeseburger Index. Listen in as Matt Kenney describes the creation process and Nick Colas dissects the numbers. Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Podbean, and Stitcher. Visit ForeignAffairs.com for a full transcript.
Margaret Schedel is an Associate Professor of Composition and Computer Music at Stony Brook University. Through her work, she explores the relatively new field of Data Sonification, generating new ways to perceive and interact with information through the use of sound. From a longer in depth article athttp://soundstudiesblog.com/2014/10/09/sounds-of-science-the-mystique-of-sonification/ Dr. Schedel states: "In the current fascination with sonification, the fact that aesthetic decisions must be made in order to translate data into the auditory domain can be obscured. Headlines such as “Here’s What the Higgs Boson Sounds Like” are much sexier than headlines such as “Here is What One Possible Mapping of Some of the Data We Have Collected from a Scientific Measuring Instrument (which itself has inaccuracies) Into Sound.” To illustrate the complexity of these aesthetic decisions, which are always interior to the sonification process, I focus here on how my collaborators and I have been using sound to understand many kinds of scientific data." We talk at length about these general topics.
University of Minnesota undergraduate Daniel Crawford studies geography and environmental science. He's also a cellist. He converted more than a century of global temperature data to create A Song of Our Warming Planet. Mark Fischetti reports.