MusicLab

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    At the heart of MusicLab Copenhagen was a full evening concert of classical music performed by the Danish String Quartet. The musicians wore motion capture suits, eye trackers, and physiological measurement devices. The aim was to study the musicians' interactions and absorption.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    MusicLab Copenhagen was the result of a two-year-long planning and preparation phase. The project was led by the former postdoctoral fellow Simon H?ffding. Due to the many postponements of the concert, Simon had moved on to a tenured associate professor position at Syddanske Universitet by the end of the project.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Around 20 researchers from RITMO and partnering institutions travelled to Copenhagen to take part in the experiment.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    The team plans the welcome of participants to the concert. The audience also participated in the data collection by filling out forms about their experiences. Audience members were also asked to wear their mobile phones in a chest strap to measure their micromotion patterns.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Rigging up a complete motion capture lab in a 19th century concert space is a non-trivial task. Lab engineer Kayla Burnim had planned everything in detail and had even organized a complete test run during MusicTestLab prior to the concert.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    The Danish String Quartet volunteered to run additional experiments before the concert. Here the research assistants place wireless heart rate sensors on the musicians.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Olivier Lartillot checks the score-following features of software developed during his MIRAGE project. The goal is to improve computers' capability to listen to and understand music and conceive technologies to facilitate music understanding and appreciation. One of the pieces was accompanied by a visualization of the musical content and form in the concert.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Laura Bishop calibrates the eye-tracking glasses with one of the members of the Danish String Quartet. The glasses allow studying the musicians' gaze during the concert and investigating the arousal levels through pupillometry.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Audience members wore their mobile phones in a custom-made chest pouch. To synchronize all the devices, postdoctoral fellow Finn Upham instructed everyone to conduct a tapping sequence at the beginning and end of the concert.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    A documentary film was made to document the unique meeting point between art and science during MusicLab Copenhagen. A film crew filmed the whole setup and interviewed key actors.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    Doctoral fellow Atilla Vrasdonk and associate professor Nanette Nielsen check the forms filled by audience members. The ratings and subjective descriptions collected will be analyzed with the data measured by the audience members' mobile phones.

  • Apr. 1, 2022

    The musicians walk off stage after a mesmerizing concert experience. Also for them, this was a unique event.