Podcasts about Sonification

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Best podcasts about Sonification

Latest podcast episodes about Sonification

Making A Difference
Episode 42 - Looking Out (Deakin University)

Making A Difference

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2025 26:22


Keeping people safe, helping people out, giving people a leg-up, giving people a chance to shine – it's what a functioning society does. In this episode of Making a Difference, journalism students at Deakin University bring us stories about looking out for people: keeping apprentices safe on the job, helping those with addiction and incarceration, creating a new world for visually impaired children, supporting emerging musicians, and encouraging artists to live their fantasy through their idol. Hosts: Piers Van Der Heide and Alissa Schleebs Stories:"Safe Apprentices" - Reporter: Shaelyn Harris  "Beating Addiction: The Power in You" - Reporter: Cooper Watkins"Spotified" - Reporter: Aidan Knight"Reaching For The Stars" - Reporter: Cat Quash "There's a Podcast For That" - Reporter: Ben Cashin"Impersonator" - Reporters: Emily Wunhym and Ruben De Franceschi "Brat Summer" - Reporter: Bella McGreevy"Penguin Parade" - Reporter: Nicolas Thurn-Valsassina Sound Design: Chris ScanlonExecutive Producer: Alison McAdamSupervising Producer: Simon BradyMore stories from Deakin University:https://www.dscribe.net.au/ More stories from The Junction:https://junctionjournalism.com/Music:‘Betelgeuse' / Kunal Shingade‘Come Back Home' / OlexyImages:'Weld' - Mike Linderer / Pixabay'Jail' - Simone Gatterwe / Pixabay'Sonification' - Joel Filipe / Unsplash'Elvis' - ARC fotos / Pixabay

Innovation Now
Echoes of Light

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024


Visit NASA's Black Hole Gallery to listen to the sounds of a black hole or learn more about the most famous black holes in our galaxy on this Black Hole Friday.

Zimmerman en Space
Een buitenaards bericht van aardse makelij

Zimmerman en Space

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 16:48


Op 24 mei vorig jaar werd een testbericht uitgezonden vanuit een baan rond de planeet Mars. Een en ander gebeurde ter voorbereiding op de dag dat we daadwerkelijk een buitenaards signaal ontvangen. Eerder dit jaar werd de boodschap eindelijk ontcijferd.Trace Gas Orbiter:https://exploration.esa.int/web/mars/-/46475-trace-gas-orbiterA Sign In Space:https://asignin.space/Can You Decode an Alien Message?https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/can-you-decode-an-alien-message/Decryption of Messages from Extraterrestrial Intelligence Using the Power of Social Media - The SETI Decrypt Challenge:https://arxiv.org/abs/1706.00653Testing SETI Message Designs:https://arxiv.org/pdf/0911.3976YouTube over het bericht van Daniela de Paulis:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gly2NoqRFi0SETI Live: A Sign in Space - Simulating First Contact:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgQq36IR-LkDe originele boodschap van de Trace Gas Orbiter (binair):https://github.com/BatchDrake/ASignInSpace/blob/master/Candidates/artifacts/data17.binDe originele boodschap van de Trace Gas Orbiter (text):https://github.com/BatchDrake/ASignInSpace/blob/master/Candidates/artifacts/data17.txtDiscord van A Sign In Space:https://discord.com/invite/2upxzmZkqYArecibo message:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_messagePhase Shift Keying (PSK):https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase-shift_keyingPython script om de boodschap hoorbaar te maken op een enigszins wetenschappelijk verantwoorde wijze:# Sonification of the TGO message.# Hens Zimmerman, 18-11-2024.# There exist two equal length wav files:# 1.wav is a short beep# 0.wav is silentimport wave# Open and read original text version of the TGO message.# https://github.com/BatchDrake/ASignInSpace/blob/master/Candidates/artifacts/data17.txtwith open('data17.txt') as f:    msg = f.read()# The whole beepy sonification will be constructed here.data = []# Read the two sound files into buffers.w = wave.open('0.wav', 'rb')zero = [w.getparams(), w.readframes(w.getnframes())]w.close()w = wave.open('1.wav', 'rb')one = [w.getparams(), w.readframes(w.getnframes())]w.close()# Append a beep for every '1' and silence for every '0'.for c in list(msg):    if c == '1':        data.append(one)    elif c == '0':        data.append(zero)# Write the output file to disk.output = wave.open('sonification.wav', 'wb')output.setparams(data[0][0])for idx in range(len(data)):    output.writeframes(data[idx][1])output.close()De Zimmerman en Space podcast is gelicenseerd onder een Creative Commons CC0 1.0 licentie.http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0

The UIUC Talkshow
#45 - Carla Scaletti & Kurt Hegel: Sonifying the Human Condition, WALL•E, and Kyma

The UIUC Talkshow

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 108:07


Carla Scaletti and Kurt Hebel are the founders of Symbolic Sound, creators of the Kyma Sound Design Environment. You may not have heard of the company or its founders, but you have definitely heard its products in films like WALL•E, The Dark Knight, Finding Nemo, games like World of Warcraft, Quake II, Mirror's Edge, and the music of A.R. Rahman. In this episode, Carla and Kurt take us behind the scenes, revealing their philosophy of being “toolmakers” for artists, musicians, and sound designers. They open up about their mission to create tools that enable people to push the boundaries of audio creativity. This conversation touches on the profound intersection of sound, science, and emotion. From the sonification of black holes to music's power in conveying complex scientific ideas, Carla and Kurt challenge us to think differently about the role of sound in shaping our world. One of the standout themes is how music can transcend time—although it unfolds over time, listening to music can create a sensation of stepping outside of time altogether. Composers, like those using Kyma, can manipulate the flow of time, making it feel like it's speeding up or slowing down, creating emotional arcs that resonate deeply with listeners. Carla and Kurt also discuss how sound shapes thought, arguing that people who study music think about time differently. In fact, they suggest music is a kind of sonification of the composer's inner mental state. When we listen, we transpose that state onto ourselves, making music one of the most profoundly meaningful forms of human expression. They also talk about the human instinct for storytelling—just as visual art ranges from literal to abstract, so too can music, ranging from highly structured compositions to avant-garde soundscapes. Even in abstract forms, humans naturally find meaning by recognizing patterns and emotions within sound. This episode offers a rare glimpse into the minds of two innovators who have significantly influenced the field of sound design and music technology. It's a deep exploration of the philosophy of sound, the future of music, and life itself. This is our conversation with Carla Scaletti and Kurt Hebel, the brilliant minds behind Symbolic Sound Corporation and the Kyma Sound Design Environment. EPISODE LINKS: Symbolic Sound: https://kyma.symbolicsound.com/ Carla Scaletti's Website: https://carlascaletti.com/ Kyma's Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyma_(sound_design_language) ILLIAC Supercomputer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ILLIAC PLATO: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PLATO_(computer_system) Don Bitzer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Bitzer OUTLINE: 0:00 - Introduction 0:38 - Cost of Education 3:35 - Aaryaman's Future Plans 12:37 - Is the Universe a Computation? 19:02 - Do Gods Have Religion? 22:16 - No sound without time 23:43 - The Sound of a Black Hole 30:05 - The Sonification of Science 41:05 - Music & Transcendence 49:53 - How to Describe Music with Words? 56:04 - Carla Scaletti's Compositions 1:00:55 - A Guide to Music Appreciation 1:14:47 - A.R. Rahman 1:19:54 - WALL-E 1:23:28 - Musical Instruments 1:27:52 - The Music of the Future 1:38:40 - How to Learn 1:44:22 - Interdisciplinary Collaboration 1:46:44 - Closing words

feliciabaxter
Best of TNFro's Bar...Sonification of Space and Space X interference, Good Eats, Beasley Back?, and Independence Day Uno and Deux

feliciabaxter

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2024 30:11


Tuning in through the noise.... Become a Melanated Nerd on Podbean or Patreon by clicking https://linktr.ee/tnfroisreading to subscribe and listen to all Premium content.

Earth Notes Podcast
2024-07-01 MUSIC RSS Podcast Feed Efficiency Sonification 2

Earth Notes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2024 2:27 Transcription Available


Sonification: sounding out the carbon cost of sloppy implementation 12 weeks in... #frugal #greenSoftware #RSS

Earth Notes Podcast
2024-06-17 MUSIC RSS Podcast Feed Efficiency Sonification 1

Earth Notes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2024 1:53 Transcription Available


Sonification: sounding out the carbon cost of sloppy implementation... #frugal #greenSoftware #RSS

Contemporánea
44. Música electrónica

Contemporánea

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 19:09


Técnica de producción de sonidos basada en la premisa de que un sonido puede dividirse en partículas, granoso cuantos, entidades sonoras de una duración de 10 a 100 milisegundos. El sonido lo producen pequeñas explosiones de energía encapsuladas en una envolvente y agrupadas en conjuntos mayores._____Has escuchadoHalf​-​Life, Part I: Sonal Atoms (1999) / Curtis Roads. presto!? (2019)PianoHertz (2012) / Horacio Vaggione. empreintes DIGITALes (2012)Riverrun (1986) / Barry Truax. Cambridge Street Records (1987)_____Selección bibliográficaASSAYAG, Gérard y Andrew Gerzso (eds.), New Computational Paradigms for Computer Music. Delatour; IRCAM, 2009*BESSELL, David, “Formant Synthesis, Granular Synthesis, and Waveshaping in ‘Halo, Bells and Voices', Bessell”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 45, n.º 1 (2007), pp. 236-252*GRABÓCZ, Márta, Entre naturalisme sonore et synthèse en temps réel. Images et formes expressives dans la musique contemporaine. Éditions des Archives Contemporaines, 2013MCGUIRE, Sam y Nathan van der Rest, The Musical Art of Synthesis. Focal Press, 2016*MIRANDA, Eduardo Reck, “Granular Synthesis of Sounds by Means of a Cellular Automaton”. Leonardo, vol. 28, n.º 4 (1995), pp. 297-300*PHILLIPS, Thomas, “Composed Silence: Microsound and the Quiet Shock of Listening”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 44, n.º 2 (2006), pp. 232-248*POLI, Giovanni de, “A Tutorial on Digital Sound Synthesis Techniques”. Computer Music Journal, vol. 7, n.º 4 (1983), pp. 8-26*ROADS, Curtis, Microsound. The MIT Press, 2001—, The Computer Music Tutorial. The MIT Press, 2023*ROCHA ITURBIDE, Manuel, Les techniques granulaires dans la synthèse sonore. Tesis Doctoral, Universidad de París VIII, 1999SU, Isabelle et al., “Sonification of a 3-D Spider Web and Reconstitution for Musical Composition Using Granular Synthesis”. Computer Music Journal, vol. 44 (2020), pp. 43-59*TRUAX, Barry, “Composing with Real-Time Granular Sound”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 28, n.º 2 (1990), pp. 120-134*—, “Composing with Time-Shifted Environmental Sound”. Leonardo Music Journal, vol. 2, n.º 1 (1992), pp. 37-40*WAKEFIELD, Graham y Gregory Taylor, Generating Sound & Organizing Time: Thinking with Gen-: Book 1. Cycling 74, 2022* *Documento disponible para su consulta en la Sala de Nuevas Músicas de la Biblioteca y Centro de Apoyo a la Investigación de la Fundación Juan March

Contemporánea
43. Síntesis granular

Contemporánea

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024 13:17


Técnica de producción de sonidos basada en la premisa de que un sonido puede dividirse en partículas, granoso cuantos, entidades sonoras de una duración de 10 a 100 milisegundos. El sonido lo producen pequeñas explosiones de energía encapsuladas en una envolvente y agrupadas en conjuntos mayores._____Has escuchadoHalf​-​Life, Part I: Sonal Atoms (1999) / Curtis Roads. presto!? (2019)PianoHertz (2012) / Horacio Vaggione. empreintes DIGITALes (2012)Riverrun (1986) / Barry Truax. Cambridge Street Records (1987)_____Selección bibliográficaASSAYAG, Gérard y Andrew Gerzso (eds.), New Computational Paradigms for Computer Music. Delatour; IRCAM, 2009*BESSELL, David, “Formant Synthesis, Granular Synthesis, and Waveshaping in ‘Halo, Bells and Voices', Bessell”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 45, n.º 1 (2007), pp. 236-252*GRABÓCZ, Márta, Entre naturalisme sonore et synthèse en temps réel. Images et formes expressives dans la musique contemporaine. Éditions des Archives Contemporaines, 2013MCGUIRE, Sam y Nathan van der Rest, The Musical Art of Synthesis. Focal Press, 2016*MIRANDA, Eduardo Reck, “Granular Synthesis of Sounds by Means of a Cellular Automaton”. Leonardo, vol. 28, n.º 4 (1995), pp. 297-300*PHILLIPS, Thomas, “Composed Silence: Microsound and the Quiet Shock of Listening”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 44, n.º 2 (2006), pp. 232-248*POLI, Giovanni de, “A Tutorial on Digital Sound Synthesis Techniques”. Computer Music Journal, vol. 7, n.º 4 (1983), pp. 8-26*ROADS, Curtis, Microsound. The MIT Press, 2001—, The Computer Music Tutorial. The MIT Press, 2023*ROCHA ITURBIDE, Manuel, Les techniques granulaires dans la synthèse sonore. Tesis Doctoral, Universidad de París VIII, 1999SU, Isabelle et al., “Sonification of a 3-D Spider Web and Reconstitution for Musical Composition Using Granular Synthesis”. Computer Music Journal, vol. 44 (2020), pp. 43-59*TRUAX, Barry, “Composing with Real-Time Granular Sound”. Perspectives of New Music, vol. 28, n.º 2 (1990), pp. 120-134*—, “Composing with Time-Shifted Environmental Sound”. Leonardo Music Journal, vol. 2, n.º 1 (1992), pp. 37-40*WAKEFIELD, Graham y Gregory Taylor, Generating Sound & Organizing Time: Thinking with Gen-: Book 1. Cycling 74, 2022* *Documento disponible para su consulta en la Sala de Nuevas Músicas de la Biblioteca y Centro de Apoyo a la Investigación de la Fundación Juan March

Light Pollution News
Apr 2024: Sonification

Light Pollution News

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 109:14 Transcription Available


Host Bill McGeeney is joined by Isa Mohammed of the Caribbean Institute of Astronomy, Frank Turina of the Night Sky Resource Center, and the Director of Dark Sky International's Engagement, Bettymaya Foott.See Full Show Notes, Lighting Tips and more at LightPollutionNews.com. Like this episode, share it with a friend!Bill's Picks:Blue lights for Benny: Delco lights up to honor 2-year-old who unexpectedly died, Leland Pinder and Katherine Scott, 6ABC. Some Entergy customers could see increase in bills because of new bulbs used in street lights, WAFB9. LED Color Temperature Selection Process, the City of Grand Rapids.Architectural Review Board Staff Report, City of Palo Alto. A night in England's darkest village, Helen Pickles, The Telegraph. UWS State Senator Renames Bird-Safety Bill FLACO Act: ‘Feathered Lives Also Count', Gus Saltonstall, West Side Rag. MEANS AND WATERWAYS: LIGHTING A FERRY TERMINAL, Randall Whitehead, Furniture, Lighting & Décor.Support the showLike what we're doing? For the cost of coffee, you can become a Monthly Supporter? Your assistance will help cover server and production costs.

Science Friday
Using Sound To Unpack The History Of Astronomy

Science Friday

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 17:48 Very Popular


Looking into space can be pretty daunting. How do we make sense of the vast expanse above our heads, the millions of stars we might be able to see, and the billions more we can't?Now, what about listening to space? That's the task that Sam Harnett and Chris Hoff gave themselves, for their series “Cosmic Visions.” They're the team behind “The World According to Sound,” a podcast that's brought our listeners close to the sounds of science over the last few years.This new series takes listeners through the history of astronomy and the study of the cosmos, from ancient Babylon to the Hubble Telescope. Harnett and Hoff join guest host John Dankosky to talk about why different ways of knowing are helpful for scientists, how images of nebulae share a striking resemblance to photos of the American West, and what their favorite space sounds are.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

New Scientist Weekly
Escape Pod: #3 Music: the jazz swing of birdsong and the sonification of the orbits of planets

New Scientist Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 16:15


This is a re-airing of a podcast originally released in February 2021.This episode is all about music, so today's journey of escapism comes complete with odd, relaxing, soothing and interesting sounds to guide you through.The team opens with the sounds of animals, specifically the singing - if you can call it that - of gorillas, and the jazzy birdsong of the thrush.They then treat you to the sounds of data sonification, courtesy of Milton Mermikides, who translates motion into music, like the swinging of a pendulum, the crystallisation of salt, or the orbits of planets.Finally they tackle the small matter of just why exactly it is we humans love music so much.On the podcast are Rowan Hooper, Bethan Ackerley and Timothy Revell.Find out more at newscientist.com/podcasts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Innovation Now
Playable Night Sky

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024


Working with composer Sophie Kastner, a NASA team has developed versions of space telescope data that can be played by musicians.

DBSV-Jugendmagazin
Nystagmus-Sonification: Studierende sucht Proband*innen für Sound-Projekt

DBSV-Jugendmagazin

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 15:19


Interview mit Annika Werner, die Music Technology Speciallist an der UWL studiert

Innovation Now
Where Parallel Lines Converge

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023


Since 2020, the sonification project at NASA's Chandra X-ray Center has translated digital images taken by telescopes into sounds.

CQFD - La 1ere
Mécanisme des oiseaux, platéosaure et sonification

CQFD - La 1ere

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 55:45


Pourquoi les oiseaux arrivent à dormir debout? Les brèves du jour "Platéosaure, ceci est un dinosaure" l'exposition du Muséum dʹhistoire naturelle de Neuchâtel Wanda Diaz-Merced, astrophysicienne, transforme en sons des signaux en provenance du cosmos

Science Vs
Sleep: How Do We Get More?

Science Vs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 32:24


Not sleeping enough turning you into a monster? In one of our most popular episodes, we bring you the cutting-edge science that helps us understand why. And we sort through the fads to find out, what really works to get more ZZZs. We speak with lab coordinator Pam DeYoung, sleep researcher Dr. Brady Riedner, and circadian scientist Prof. Russell Foster.  Find our transcript here: https://bit.ly/ScienceVsSleep2023 In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Not sleeping sucks (03:00) What does lack of sleep do to us? (06:07) Our beer vs. sleepiness experiment (10:56) What happens in a sleepy brain (17:45) How circadian rhythm affects sleep (21:19) Does melatonin help with sleep? (23:50) Does blue light keep us awake? This episode was produced by Rose Rimler and Lexi Krupp with help from Wendy Zukerman, Michelle Dang, Meryl Horn and Kaitlyn Sawrey. Editing by Caitlin Kenney. Fact checking by Diane Kelly and Erica Akiko Howard. Mix and sound design by Peter Leonard and Bumi Hidaka. Music written by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger, Bobby Lord, and Bach. Recording assistance from Dave Drexler, Tim Peterson, Zoe Sullivan, and Martin Wiggins. Sonification of EEG data came from Dr. Gerold Baier and Dr. Thomas Hermann. A huge thanks to Dr. Amandine Valomon, Prof. James Krueger, Dr. Ari Shechter, Dr. Jade Wu, Dr. Bei Bei, Dr. Connor Sheehan, Dr. Jennifer Ailshire, Dr. Agostinho Rosa, and everyone else we spoke to for this episode, especially our frustrated sleepers. Thank you so much for all the voice messages! And special thanks to Chuma Ossé, the Zukerman family and Joseph Lavelle Wilson. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

3MONKEYS
NASA | Sun Sonification (raw audio)

3MONKEYS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 1:22


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I-zdmg_Dno why does your heart beat? #2023 #art #music #movies #poetry #poem #photooftheday #volcano #news #money #food #weather #climate #monkeys #horse #puppy #fyp #love #instagood #onelove #eyes #getyoked #horsie #gotmilk #book #shecomin #getready

Innovation Now
Haunting Sounds

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023


These black hole sound waves were resynthesized into an eerie mix that may haunt you.

Dr.Future Show, Live FUTURE TUESDAYS on KSCO 1080
36 Future Now Show - Galactic Sonification, Coffee, Adaptogenic Fungi, and the Big U, with Guests Gabriel Cianfrani and Paul Gotel

Dr.Future Show, Live FUTURE TUESDAYS on KSCO 1080

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023


Listen Now to #36 Future Now Show Listening to the cosmos has never been so much fun or interesting!  With advancements in sensor technology and computing power, we can now use our ears to tune into the universe like never before! In our explorations of the sonic universe, you’ll hear a black hole, a stellar nursery, and the planets in motion of the Trappist-1 solar system, 40 light years away.. Gabrielle at sunset on Skyline with Al & Sun Jersey Grrrl Gabrielle makes a brief appearance in the studio today, mostly chatting about boutique coffee in combination with adaptogenic mushrooms..She’s formulated a new product along these lines via her company, Boardwalk Beans. Our main studio guest, author Paul Gotel, brings some engaging concepts and practical suggestions towards creating a better reality for ourselves, in his interview about his book, “The Big U,” a guide to living large. Paul also shares details of his NEO (Near Death Experience) and what it means to him, and a recent electrifying lesson he learned with his teenage son.  Not afraid to go deep, Paul gets into all kinds of fun stuff, like loss as an act of purification, fluidity as identity, authenticity in a fully unencumbered Now, and suffering as the retention of identity.  Not for everyone, but for those who grok this kind of thing, it’s great, enjoy! L-R Allan & Sun Lundell, Paul Gotel

The Power of Music Thinking
Sonification with Mike von der Nahmer

The Power of Music Thinking

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 76:38


Mike von der Nahmer is a sound researcher, music therapist, scientific collaborator at the German Aerospace Center and composer.  With over 30 stage works and 100+ compositions, he holds international recognition. He has collaborated with GRAMMY, Kenwood, Sony BMG, Rolls Royce and BMW, and his music has been featured in TV series like NOVA. Mike shares with us some sonification projects in various domains, such as weather patterns, language, the brain, and sound design in autonomous vehicles. For example, he gives us insights into his work at the German Aerospace Center (the German NASA), where he works on the sonification of air traffic control. Today, you will not only hear us talking but also experience different sound worlds. Because Mike brought some sound files to the conversation, we hear different sound layers from an air traffic game and examples of what he calls 'mood compositions' for Rolls Royce, BMW and Mini that are central in the sound strategy of these car brands.  We end the conversation with a longer piece of about five minutes of sonification of curves that Mike co-created with two outstanding mathematicians in Luxemburg.  So be prepared to hear about pioneering thoughts connecting sound, science, and human experience. Show Notes Connect with Mike via LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-michael-mike-von-der-nahmer-0780964/  Sonification in Air Traffic Control, German Aerospace Center (DLR): https://www.dlr.de/fl/en/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-1149/1737_read-74107/  “ReShape”, Sound of Data - Science meets Music, sonification of curves: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9l_oTHr-_w   Mashrabiya ReShaped, painting curves to music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ci0uISK2KAA  Mike von der Nahmer, Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@mikevondernahmer5051  Mentimeter questions on sonification: https://www.menti.com/altpihgk8vfp/0  Beethoven's 5th mapped in a Customer Journey software: https://www.smaply.com/blog/cx-professional-interview-christof-zuern Show support Please choose one or more of the 'three ways to support the show'! Subscribe to the podcast. Leave us a review — even one sentence helps! I appreciate your support; it helps the show! Tell your friends about the podcast and musicthinking.com Buy the book The Power of Music Thinking and/or the Jam Cards. The Power of Music Thinking is brought to you by CREATIVE COMPANION specialised in facilitating leaders, teams and organisations in customer experience, change and innovation.  

feliciabaxter
TNFro's Bar...Sonification of Space and Space X interference, Good Eats, Beasley Back?, and Independence Day Uno and Deux

feliciabaxter

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 30:11


Tuning in through the noise.... Become a Melanated Nerd on Podbean or Patreon by clicking https://linktr.ee/tnfroisreading to subscribe and listen to all Premium content; the window closes soon on available Episodes across most platforms!

Earth Notes Podcast
2023-07-14 Yearly Electricity Grid Flows Sonified

Earth Notes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 2:11


Sonification: total electricity imports and exports 2009 to 2023 #podcast #audification #house

Volcano Watch
May 2023 - Dr. Leif Karlstrom and sonification!

Volcano Watch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 23:51


Hi all! Sorry for the long hiatus! Here we have the volcano news for May 2023 and a stellar interview with Dr. Leif Karlstrom! You can check out more of the Volcano Listening Project here: https://volcanolisteningproject.org/. You can also keep updated with the project on twitter @VolcanoListenerThe sound clip is from a very cool recent article: https://eos.org/science-updates/earth-is-noisy-why-should-its-data-be-silent. Check it out!And thanks again Dr. Karlstrom for the interview! :)

Earth Notes Podcast
2023-04-10 Water Music: In The House

Earth Notes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 0:53


Sonification: nearly 15 years of data as a house track #podcast #audification #house

StarTalk Radio
Cosmic Queries – The Sound of Space with Kimberly Arcand

StarTalk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 51:39


What does space sound like? Neil deGrasse Tyson and Matt Kirshen explore space sonification projects and Chandra x-ray data with astronomy visualization expert Kimberly Arcand. Hear what the supermassive black hole at the center of The Milky Way sounds like…NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-freeThanks to our Patrons Brittani Vega, Anish Abraham, Charlie Chapter Zhang, John McCormack, Eugene C Nickel Jr, and Marcus Ruzzon for supporting us this week.Photo Credit: Hubble ESA, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Stories Worth Telling Forever
Ep.4 - Blackholes, Wildfires and the Sonification of the New York Skyline

Stories Worth Telling Forever

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 40:13


There are things we can hear that we cannot see. Every day things like the seconds ticking away on a clock down the hall or the sound a kettle makes as the water inside rises in temperature. There are profound things like the merger of two massive black holes or the speed of a wildfire burning 5000 acres of land per hour. There is the wonder you experience when you hear the rise and fall of a city skyline composed on a piano. In this episode, we will explore these sounds and provide unique insights into a world of information made possible by turning data into sound, otherwise known as sonification.We chat with Jon Bellona, a pioneer in the field of sonification and a Ph.D. faculty member at the University of Oregon, and David Owen, a writer for the New Yorker and Author of the book Volume Control.Visit foreverstories.xyz for additional content and learn more about the ForeverStories project. Discover how we use Arweave, Akord, and the Permaweb to preserve these important cultural artifacts for future generations.

Field Recordings
Underwater, Førdefjord, north of Bergen, Norway in February 2023 – by Jay Richardson

Field Recordings

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 3:03


“Myself and my co-editor (at The Sonification) went to cover a story about a mining company that has permits to start an open pit project in a rural area about […]

Temna stran Lune
27 - Prisluhni mi!

Temna stran Lune

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 34:11


O astronomskih slikah in cocktail zabavah. S pomočjo Anite Zanella predstavljava novo razvijajoče se področje, ki astronomske podatke prelevi v zvok. Za podporo/kavo: https://ko-fi.com/temnastranlune! --- Zapiski: Intervju z Anito Zanella (INAF): [članek Scientific American] Audio Astronomy Unlocks a Universe of Sound konferenca The Audible Universe 2 o učinku koktajl zabave: Sonification and Sound Design for Astronomy Research, Education and Public Engagement Zvok 1: zlitje črnih lukenj - sonifikacija gravitacijskih valov Zvok 2: sonifikacija gravitacijskih valov s šumom Spletna igra Black Hole Hunter Zvok 3: Stars Appearing Sonification - planetarium show Audio Universe Data Sonification Archive Projekti: Herakoi in Audio Universe Project Astronomy Festival The Universe in all senses in Castellaro Lagusello, June 9-10-11 Avtorstvo zvok 1 in 2: Connor McIsaac (University of Portsmouth) in Edward Fauchon-Jones (Cardiff University); Avtorstvo zvok 3: C. Harrison (Newcastle University)/J. Trayford in N. Bonne (University of Portsmouth); VLT Model: European Southern Observatory Novice: Asteroid 2023 CX1 in njegova najdba 10. let od meteorita nad Čeljabinskim Messierov maraton v Trnovem nad Novo Gorico, 18. marec 2023 Opazovanja: (knjiga) G. Cannat, “Glej jih, zvezde! Najlepši prizori na nebu v letu 2023” Preleti Mednarodne vesoljske postaje: na spletni strani Vesolje.net, na spletni strani Heavens-Above ---- Logo: (predelan) posnetek Lune, avtorstvo NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio Zvočni intermezzo: NASA/Hubble/SYSTEM Sounds (Matt Russo, Andrew Santaguida) Glasba: Peli (Opravičujemo se za vse nevšečnosti)

Le zoom de la rédaction
Les Oreilles d'Or. Comment reconstituer la "sonification" de l'univers

Le zoom de la rédaction

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2022 4:15


durée : 00:04:15 - Le zoom de la rédaction - Les Oreilles d'Or, épisode 2. On continue notre série de reportages consacrée aux experts du son. Aujourd'hui, comment reconstituer un paysage sonore de l'univers ? Reportage à l'Observatoire de Paris d'Aurélien Colly.

Curiosity Daily
Happy Healthy Kids, Hearing Data, Oystersong

Curiosity Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 13:43


Today you'll learn about how kids' well-being can affect adult heart health, what our ears can tell us about the cosmos, and how playing music meant for oysters can help them adapt to climate change. Happy Healthy Kids “Protecting Children's Psychological Well-being Could Help Strengthen Their Hearts as Adults” by Boehm, J. K.https://www.psychologicalscience.org/publications/observer/obsonline/2022-sept-childhood-psychological-health-adult-hearts.html“Psychological Well-Being in Childhood and Cardiometabolic Risk in Middle Adulthood: Findings From the 1958 British Birth Cohort” by Julia K. Boehmhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/09567976221075608Hearing Data “Scientists are turning data into sound to listen to the whispers of the universe (and more)” by Jeffrey Cookehttps://www.space.com/astronomy-sonification-turn-data-to-music“Sonification and Sound Design for Astronomy Research, Education and Public Engagement” by A. Zanellahttps://arxiv.org/abs/2206.13536Oystersong “Playing sea soundscapes can summon thousands of baby oysters – and help regrow oyster reefs” by Dominic McAfeehttps://theconversation.com/playing-sea-soundscapes-can-summon-thousands-of-baby-oysters-and-help-regrow-oyster-reefs-188006“Soundscape enrichment enhances recruitment and habitat building on new oyster reef restorations” by Dominic McAfee, Brittany R. Williams, Lachlan McLeod, Andreas Reuter, Zak Wheaton, and Sean D. Connellhttps://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.14307“Oyster Reefs at Risk and Recommendations for Conservation, Restoration, and Management” by Michael W. Beck et al.https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/61/2/107/242615Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to get smarter with Calli and Nate — for free! Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers.Find episode transcripts here: https://curiosity-daily-4e53644e.simplecast.com/episodes/happy-healthy-kids-hearing-data-oystersong

Innovation Now
An Eerie Remix

Innovation Now

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022


Since 2003, astronomers have tried to hear the sounds this black hole is creating.

RNIB Connect
1400: Sight Loss and Sonification: An Interview with Wanda Diaz-Merced

RNIB Connect

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 8:14


How do you become a scientist if you're VI? Our David Hogg spoke to VI astrophysicist Wanda Diaz-Merced to find out how she became a scientist and how she's revolutionising science through sound…

Free Range with Mike Livermore
Matthew Burtner on Ecoacoustics

Free Range with Mike Livermore

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 66:08


On this episode of Free Range, Michael Livermore speaks with Matthew Burtner, a Professor of Compositions and Computer Technologies in the music department at the University of Virginia. Burtner's work explores ecology and the aesthetic link between human expression and environmental systems. His latest album is Ice Field. Burtner begins by discussion how his music tries to decenter humans. (0:51-2:29) After listeners hear a snippet from the title track, Livermore inquires about the physical logistics of how he recorded this track. (3:58 – 8:13) Burtner recalls the improvisation he did while on the ice field and describes how environmental music appreciating a new kind of beauty. (8:21 – 11:55) He goes on to explains his commitment to understanding these natural systems as independent forms of aesthetics. (12:00 – 17:30) Burtner describes how he uses sonification to translate environmental data into sounds. He describes how sonification allows us to listen to sounds new kind of sounds, like light reflecting off waves, and to transpose temporality by taking decades worth of data and turning it into a musical phrase we can perceive. On Ice Field, two of his works use sonification, “Ice Prints” which uses ice extent data from the Arctic and is mapped into piano music and “Sonification of an Arctic Lagoon.” (17:32 – 21:20) A snippet of his track “Sonification of an Arctic Lagoon” is played. This piece takes different layers of data and creates musical sounds, this 4-minute piece is 1-year worth of data mapped into musical form. (21:21 – 23:29) Livermore and Burtner discuss the differences between sonification and a more common impressionism approach to relating music to the natural environment. Burtner explains how data is not always what he may want it to sound like and may not be satisfying as music. He explains that you can either try to change the data, which won't represent the system anymore, or listen to it and find the beauty. (23:31 – 29:05) Burtner discusses different approaches to eco-acoustic music: presenting environmental data as sound (sonification), field recording natural sounds (soundscaping), and using natural features as instruments in human-environment interactions. Livermore and Burtner discuss the different technologies used in these techniques and how they are theorized. (29:15 – 36:44) Burtner delves into his favorite examples of soundscape field recording that he has done, playing snippets of both. (36:46 – 41:53) Burtner explains that these recordings transpose our listening outside of our human centered perception. (42:00 – 46:26) Livermore poses a question about aesthetics theory and how the relationship between the deep tradition we inherit affects our way of appreciating these types of music. Burtner explains that knowledge helps open up the world to different dimensions of aesthetics; that it becomes richer the more he learns. (46:30 – 51:26) Burtner discusses how environmental politics has unintentionally played a role with his music and that he appreciates that his music can be a part of that type of discourse. (51:27 – 55:43) With climate change already happening, Livermore asks how much of Burtner's work is coming to terms with these inevitable changes; Is it mourning, celebration, or are they entangled? Burtner describes that art has always given us a place to deal with tragedy, that music gives us a space to mourn. He explains that inside all of these tragedies are modes of sustainability and restoration; they don't always have to be about loss. (55:44 – 1:00:57) Livermore ends the episode inquiring about how listeners should approach and interact with these conceptual pieces at different layers. Burtner describes that the music is designed to be understood on its own and on another level as conceptual art. He hopes that it can be a multifaceted experience of listening. (1:01:03 – 1:05:43)

Double Density
Episode 194: The Peachman's Ploy

Double Density

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 11:56


Brian's solo again. "Siri, play the sound of the universe's destruction." Someone's old Nokia phone has become sentient and started T9 texting loved ones. Space man is bad man. Good riddance to Andrew Tate, and let's say hello to the Denver peach people who also back 21-year-old conspiracies.

Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds
NASA Webb Telescope - Carina's Cosmic Cliffs Sonification

Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 540:00


Fly through a peaceful atmosphere of nebulas to a musical interpretation of NASA's images of Carina captured by the Webb Telescope. The audio in this video was created by interpreting the images of Carina as audio, interpreting the resulting tones as MIDI, and then combining the two sources into one track. Listen with a 4k Nebula Fly Through Here! Listen on White Noise! Credit: IMAGE: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

astro[sound]bites
Episode 60: An Ear for Education (Sonification 2)

astro[sound]bites

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2022 73:42


It's time for our jam-packed sonification sequel, which includes two interviews, 5 (!) space sounds, and a critical fourth “i” for how sonification is used in astronomy! We're first joined by Paul Green and Afra Ashram, the creators of the new sonification project Sensing the Dynamic Universe. Then Sarah Kane, a senior undergrad at the University of Pennsylvania, joins us to talk about her journey in astronomy and sonification while being legally blind. We round things out by listening to kilonovae, radio interferometers, and the atmosphere of Uranus! Is there anything we didn't discuss?    0:00 First 3 “i”s 5:05 Sensing the Dynamic Universe interview (4th “i”) 29:17 Reflections on SDU 32:14 Sarah Kane interview 55:31 Our educational sonifications   Sensing the Dynamic Universe: https://lweb.cfa.harvard.edu/sdu/index.html Our sonification astrobite from last year: astrobites.org/2021/06/17/getting-started-in-sonification/ An article about Sarah Kane (isn't she so fashionable?): omnia.sas.upenn.edu/story/disability-advocacy-and-sciences SonoUno:sion.frm.utn.edu.ar/sonoUno/ Astronify:astronify.readthedocs.io/ Twotone: twotone-midiout-beta.netlify.app Miditime (for advanced users): github.com/cirlabs/miditime

Space Nuts
Sonification - The Sounds of the Universe

Space Nuts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 46:05 Very Popular


Astronomy, Science, Space, and Stuff.Space Nuts Episode 308 with Professor Fred Watson & Andrew Dunkley •Sonification – the beautiful sounds of our Universe. To hear more and find out more about the project visit https://chandra.harvard.edu/sound/ •The orbit of Earth and how it's affected our ice sheets•Listener questions – We have questions on gravitational waves, the expansion of the Universe and the unknown objects we keep looking for. Fred has all the answers…Sponsor Links:NordVPN – the fast and best way of securing your data. Get our special price, plus one month free and a bonus gift by visiting https://nordvpn.com/spacenuts and using the code SPACENUTS.The Space Nuts Premium edition is now available on Spotify for our Supercast subscribers (sorry, Patreon isn't there yet…fingers crossed). To access the premium feed, just log in to your Spotify account and do a search. Use your current subscriber details to unlock the premium content. If you'd like to become a subscriber, just visit https://spacenuts.supercast.tech and sign up. You even get a 30-day free trial to see if it's right for you. Nothing to lose.Premium Editions also now available via subscription through Apple Podcasts…again with a 30-day free trial.For more Space Nuts, visit our websites. Links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ New: Listen to Space Nuts on your favorite app with the Universal listen link: https://spacenutspodcast.com/listen Are you a Discord fan? If so…come and join our ever-growing community. https://discord.gg/V4822WSmnJ If you find value in Andrew & Fred's work, you might like to consider buying them a coffee. They'd really appreciate the break. Thank you… https://www.buymeacoffee.com/spacenuts Sponsor Details:This episode of Space Nuts is brought to you by NordVPN…the highly rated VPN service and the one we personally use. Fast and secure. It's the one you need in your life. As part of the Space Nuts family, we have a special holiday season deal for you…just visit www.nordvpn.com/spacenuts for details.MeUndies: https://meundies.com/spacenuts for 15% off your first order.Heights – The Braincare People: https://yourheights.com to start looking after your brain and use the promo code SpaceNuts to get our special discount off your first order. Start taking care of your brain today…. you'll be glad you did.For more Space Nuts, supporter links, sponsor links, to visit the shop, buy a book, leave us your questions, and stream podcast episodes on-demand, visit our website at https://spacenutspodcast.com or the new www.bitesz.com site https://www.bitesz.com/show/space-nuts/ (mobile friendly).New link: https://spacenuts.io New Link: https://spacenutsshop.com to go directly to our shop.Send us a message, ask a question…whatever. We love hearing from you: https://www.speakpipe.com/spacenutsFind all our show links at https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ Take the Space Nuts Listener Feedback survey. We need to know how you think the show is going. Take the 1-minute survey at https://spacenutspodcast.com/feedback - thank you.If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…For more podcast listening, visit our HQ at https://bitesz.com #podcast #spacenuts #astronomy #space #science

The Perception & Action Podcast
404 – Training Anticipation with Eye Movement Sonification

The Perception & Action Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 13:51


Can you improve an athlete's ability to anticipate the actions of an opponent by guiding their gaze to particular locations using sound?     Articles:The effect of eye movement sonification on visual search patterns and anticipation in novices   More information: http://perceptionaction.com/ My Research Gate Page (pdfs of my articles) My ASU Web page Podcast Facebook page (videos, pics, etc)   Subscribe in iOS/Apple Subscribe in Anroid/Google   Support the podcast and receive bonus content   Credits: The Flamin' Groovies – ShakeSome Action Mark Lanegan - Saint Louis Elegy via freemusicarchive.org and jamendo.com

Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds
NASA Black Hole Sonification M87 3 Hours

Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 180:30


This is the sound of data from the black hole at the center of galaxy Messier 87. The sound uses data from telescopes including X-rays from Chandra, light from Hubble, and radio waves from the Atacama Array in Chile. Each set of telescope data is interpreted as a different range of audio waves which create melodic, chord like tones. The original sonification was only ~30 seconds but this version has been stretched significantly longer using special software and has been balanced between the right and left channels. Spotify listener? Lose the ads and intros and get access to 8 hour episodes by becoming a subscriber! https://anchor.fm/tmsoft/subscribe Learn more about the White Noise App Download the White Noise app for free! Download this sound to White Noise for free! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

LINUX Unplugged
457: Automated Chaos

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 47:56 Very Popular


Scientific Sense ®
Prof. Timothy Cernak of the Univ of Michigan on supply chains, antivirals and molecular sonification

Scientific Sense ®

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022 56:08


Reinforcing the supply chain of umifenovir and other antiviral drugs with retrosynthetic software, Ultrahigh-Throughput Experimentation for Information-Rich Chemical Synthesis, A map of the amine–carboxylic acid coupling system, Molecular Sonification for Molecule to Music Information Transfer Scientific Sense ® by Gill Eapen: Prof. Timothy Cernak is Assistant Professor of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Michigan. His Lab studies the interface of chemical synthesis and computer science. Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo2wiIHPM35xPawotek2IDA/join --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/scientificsense/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/scientificsense/support

Sustain Open Source Design
Episode 27: Jenn Kotler on Astronomical Sonification and Designing UX for Science & Open Data

Sustain Open Source Design

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 42:35


Guest Jenn Kotler Panelists Richard Littauer | Memo Esparza | Eriol Fox | Django Skorupa Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain Open Source Design! The podcast where we talk about sustaining open source with design. Learn how we, as designers, interface with open source in a sustainable way, how we integrate into different communities, and how we as coders, work with other designers. Today, we have the wonderful Jenn Kotler joining us! Jenn is a User Experience Designer at the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST), where she designs data search and analysis tools for telescope missions including Webb, Hubble, TESS, and Kepler, all available for free use. Jenn fills us on what she does at MAST, the different types of data they look at, and how she uses this data in her job to make it accessible so everyone can do amazing science. We learn more about sonification, Jenn's thoughts of her ideal scenario of bringing the design community into the open source space, and something that's difficult about being a designer in a space where there's not a lot of other designers. Go ahead and download this episode now! [00:02:28] Jenn fills us on what she does at MAST. [00:04:19] We learn how many people work in the archive with Jenn and how many people work at the Institute that have access to use the archive. [00:05:36] Jenn explains about the different types of data they look at and how she facilitates that as a User Experience Designer. [00:08:27] Find out how Jenn ended up working at MAST and in the science field, and how she focuses on the data after it's gone through a pipeline and a lot of adjustments have already been done to it. [00:12:45] We hear a great explanation of what sonification is and then Jenn talks about her experience with it, and there's an actual audio of a sonification she plays. [00:17:16] If they are using sound and light in terms of images, Richard wonders if Jen could combine them and have people play a video game where they walk through a world of seeing different visualizations. [00:18:44] Jenn breaks down accessibility and how they want this data to be accessible and approachable to everyone, since it's free. [00:23:44] Django wonders how Jenn balances accessibility in the effort of producing a clean user experience for the max number of people. She explains the methods they've been using. [00:27:41] Eriol asks Jenn to talk about her ideal scenario of bringing the design community into the open source space where she works, and whether design science fiction comes into that space. [00:31:18] We find out what's difficult for Jenn right now and what she wishes she could change for the better. [00:37:25] Find out where you can follow Jenn on the web. Quotes [00:10:49] “If there's a topic or subject you're interested in it's really great to explore and find the place that needs a designer but doesn't even know it.” [00:22:10] “If you're able to use a computer there isn't a great reason you shouldn't be able to do astronomy if you have an interest in it.” [00:29:30] “That was the thing that excited me about sonification initially, this idea of there's so much value here and just an art, forget science, there's a lot of cool things that could be made with this.” [00:36:28] “In the past I struggled with feeling like I used up all this creative energy on something that is so boring and then I had nothing left for myself.” Spotlight [00:38:05] Eriol's spotlight is a Coordinate Tool for No Man's Sky called NMSCoordinates. [00:38:44] Memo's spotlight is a book that changed his life called, Nightfall. [00:39:14] Richard's spotlight is Tehching Hsieh, who's a Performance Artist. [00:39:37] Django's spotlights are an open source project called Open Foundry and Compositions 1960. [00:41:02] Jenn's spotlight is a book she read called, Sitting Pretty and her favorite font, Atkinson Hyperlegible. Links Open Source Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/opensrcdesign) Open Source Design (https://opensourcedesign.net/) Sustain Design & UX working group (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/t/design-ux-working-group/348) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) Sustain Open Source Twitter (https://twitter.com/sustainoss?lang=en) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Eriol Fox Twitter (https://twitter.com/EriolDoesDesign?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Memo Esparza Twitter (https://twitter.com/memo_es_) Django Skorupa Twitter (https://twitter.com/djangoskorupa) Astronify: Open Source Python Sonification Library (https://astronify.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) Jennifer Kotler Website (https://jennk.com/) Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST) (https://archive.stsci.edu/) Space Telescope Science Institute Twitter (https://twitter.com/SpaceTelescope) MAST Twitter (https://twitter.com/MAST_News) Space Telescope Science Institute (https://www.stsci.edu/) Space Telescope Science Institute-Public Outreach (https://www.stsci.edu/communications-and-outreach/public-outreach) NMSCoordinates (https://github.com/Kevin0M16/NMSCoordinates) Nightfall by Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/99245.Nightfall) Tehching Hsieh (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tehching_Hsieh) Open Foundry (https://open-foundry.com/fonts) Compositions 1960 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compositions_1960) Sitting Pretty by Rebekah Taussig (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52167161-sitting-pretty) Atkinson Hyperlegible Font (https://brailleinstitute.org/freefont) Sonification explanations-Flaring Stars (https://stsci.app.box.com/s/39y5185udfvcxof89a242p7g0qowfww8/folder/123281631289) Sonification explanations (https://stsci.app.box.com/s/39y5185udfvcxof89a242p7g0qowfww8/folder/119703347145) Create With Light-Student Sonification art (https://astronify.readthedocs.io/en/latest/CreateWithLight.html) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Jenn Kotler.

RTL Today - In Conversation with Lisa Burke
78. The Sound of Data, and how to build a World Expo Pavilio, 24/04/2022 13:00

RTL Today - In Conversation with Lisa Burke

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022


Patrizia Luchetta and Paul Bradshaw chat about Sonification + the Esch 2022 Project. Daniel Sahr reminisces about the 5 year Dubai 2020 project. Sonification is a burgeoning field of science and music. This project kicks off next weekend in Rockhal, part of Esch 2022 Capital of Culture. Plus, Daniel Sahr talks about his time in Dubai building the Luxembourg Pavilion for World Expo 2020. The Sound of Data, or sonification, can be thought of as the visualisation of data for the ears. It's a combination of science and music plus the use of big data. Patrizia Luchetta and Paul Bradshaw talk to us about the multi-faceted launch event on Sunday 1 May at Rockhal, Belval from 1400 to 1930. We'll meet a cyborg, a colour-blind man who uses a sonification implant to 'see' colours, for example. Other guests include Valery Vermeulen, Nuria Bonet, Alexandra Supper, Cristian Vogel and Cedric Fischer. There are many partners in this project including FNR, LIST, the University of Luxembourg, Rockhal and more besides. There'll be plenty on offer for children to explore and deeper discussions too. For scientists and musicians interested in taking part in the project's artist residency the information about how to apply is already online. This project will continue until 3 December 2022. World Expo Dubai 2020 Daniel Sahr, Director of the Luxembourg Pavilion for the World Expo 2020 in Dubai is just closing down this project before rapidly starting on the next for Osaka World Expo. Here, we reflect on the five year journey from standing in the sand to a set of global pavilions visited by thousands. The World Expo was one of the first big events to open post / during covid for people to start travelling and exploring again. The Luxembourg Pavilion itself saw almost 700,000 visitors - more than the population of the country!. We hear stories of a child thanking Luxembourg for helping to build his country, the UAE with steel from Belval to build the Burj Khalifa. And so it goes on. The memories of the student chefs getting the chance to cook and learn from the best in Dubai at the Pavilion. Daniel, aside from the personal celebration of getting married and about to have his first child, is already thinking and planning for Osaka 2025. For anyone interested in the tenders for applications, keep your eyes peeled for more information on the website to come! www.thesoundofdata.lu www.luxembourgexpo2020dubai.lu https://www.instagram.com/thesoundofdata/ https://www.cc.lu/

RTL Today - In Conversation with Lisa Burke
The Sound of Data, and how to build a World Expo Pavilion, 22/04/2022 21:37

RTL Today - In Conversation with Lisa Burke

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2022


Sonification is a burgeoning field of science and music. This project kicks off next weekend in Rockhal, part of Esch 2022 Capital of Culture. Plus, Daniel Sahr talks about his time in Dubai building the Luxembourg Pavilion for World Expo 2020.

The Music Show
Jaime Martin picks up the baton at the MSO and Jamie Perera sonifies the Anthropocene

The Music Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2022 54:06


Saturday 19 February: Jaime Martín on his new gig at the MSO and why his previous life as an orchestral player sets him up well, and composer Jamie Perera on how he turns reams of climate and sociological data into musical soundscapes.

This Is What Blind Looks Like Podcast
S 2. Ep. 10: Sonification: Exploring the world through sound

This Is What Blind Looks Like Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 54:08


On this episode, Angie sits back and listens. Kimberly introduces us to Hugh McGrory, who works at Sonify. He specializes in sonification and is doing a study with Blind people, which Kimberly is apart of. Come and learn how sonification helps blind people navigate the world.For more info check out: www.Sonify.ioFollow us on:Facebook.com/thisiswhatblindlookslikeTwitter: twitter.com/BlindLooksLike

New Scientist Escape Pod
#3 Music: the jazz swing of birdsong and the sonification of the orbits of planets

New Scientist Escape Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 16:32


This episode is all about music, so today's journey of escapism comes complete with odd, relaxing, soothing and interesting sounds to guide you through. The team opens with the sounds of animals, specifically the singing - if you can call it that - of gorillas, and the jazzy birdsong of the thrush. They then treat you to the sounds of data sonification, courtesy of Milton Mermikides, who translates motion into music, like the swinging of a pendulum, the crystallisation of salt, or the orbits of planets. Finally they tackle the small matter of just why exactly it is we humans love music so much. On the pod are Rowan Hooper, Bethan Ackerley and Timothy Revell. Find out more at newscientist.com/podcasts Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

music planets orbits birdsong sonification jazz swing milton mermikides
Ears to the Earth
Field Recordings, Sonification, and Site-Specific Compositions, OH MY!!

Ears to the Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020 13:29


This episode dives deeper into the differences between field recordings, signification, and site-specific compositions. Bernie Krause Ted Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTbA-mxo858&t=335sAndrea Polli: https://sites.google.com/andreapolli.com/main/andrea-polli?authuser=0Heat and Heartbeat in the City: http://archive.turbulence.org/project/heat-and-the-heartbeat-of-the-city/Kits Beach Soundwalk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hg96nU6ltLkWild Energy: https://www.caramoor.org/music/sonic-innovations/wild-energy/