Tidligere arrangementer - Side 12
Anne Danielsen and Kristian Nymoen will present one of their latest papers.
We wish to invite you to an open midway assessment for our Doctoral Research Fellow in Musicology Guilherme Schmidt C?mara
To comment on the candidate's work, we have invited Professor Justin London from Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota.
We would like to invite you all to celebrate the launch of Postdoctoral Fellow Simon H?ffding's new monograph A Phenomenology of Musical Absorption
Jessie Fillerup, Associate Professor of Music at the University of Richmond and research fellow at the Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, will give a seminar lecture entitled " Musical Temporality in Theatrical Magic Shows".
Results from the 2019 Norwegian Championship of Standstill, held in parallel at the University of Oslo and NTNU.
An intensive PhD-level training course on sound and motion analysis with experts in sound and music computing from the Nordic countries.
An interactive art installation at the Life science light event in the Botanical Garden. Self-playing guitars that entrain to each other and interact with people.
Samuel Mehr, Research Associate in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University, will give a seminar lecture entitled "Origins and Functions of Music in Infancy".
This talk draws on Prof. Nancy Baym's new book "Playing to the Crowd: Musicians, Audiences, and the Intimate Work of Connection", plus nearly a decade of work on the tensions that musicians - and many others - must manage as social media platforms become integral to professional life.
Bring your own lunch and get some food for thought at RITMO's Food and Paper talk. Our third guest in this series is Marit Lobben (University of Oslo).
Professor David Huron from the Ohio State University will lecture on "the Musically Sublime".
Professor David Huron (Ohio State University) will lecture on "A Theory of Sadness: Melancholy, Grief, and Nostalgia".
MusicLab Vol. 3 explores the phenomenon of rhythm - in music and in the body - all within MusicLab’s unique blend of research and edutainment through an intellectual warm-up with world-leading experts, music-dance performances and data jockeying with our house DJ and anyone else interested.
Welcome to the opening conference of RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time and Motion. Lectures, panels, music and party!
In connection with RITMO International Motion Capture Workshop, Peter Vuust will hold the lecture Groove on the Brain - predictive coding of rhythmic interaction. The lecture is open for all.
In connection with RITMO International Motion Capture Workshop, Marc Leman will hold the lecture The entrainment of body rhythms with music / for music. The lecture is open for all.
In connection with RITMO International Motion Capture Workshop, Marcelo M. Wanderley will hold the lecture Motion Capture of Music Performances: Overview of almost 2 decades of research. The lecture is open for all.
A workshop for exploring advanced methods for capturing and analysing human music-related motion.
This data comes from a DSQ concert in K?ge, Denmark in the fall of 2018.
Andrea Schiavio (University of Graz) will lecture on "Being, Knowing, and Doing. 4E Cognition and the Dynamics of Musical Development".
Bring your own lunch and get some food for thought at RITMO's Food and Paper talk. Our guest today is Tommy Himberg from Aalto University.
Karsten Specht (University of Bergen) will lecture on Rhythm, Tempo, and the Brain: fMRI studies in Bergen
Join us for an informal evening of hacking on data recorded during MusicLab vol 1 and 2: sound, video, muscle sensors (EMG) and breathing.
Composer-researcher Oded Ben-Tal presents his ongoing research in music artificial intelligence.
Maria Witek (Birmingham) will lecture on "Musical Groove: Effect on pleasure, body-movement and the brain".