Towards some Organising Principles for Musical Program Auralisations
Author(s) -
Paul Vickers,
Jane Alty
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
electronic workshops in computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 1477-9358
DOI - 10.14236/ewic/ad1998.29
Subject(s) - musical , computer science , turbo pascal , pascal (unit) , programmer , programming language , set (abstract data type) , human–computer interaction , rigour , natural language processing , visual arts , art , geometry , mathematics
Early studies have shown that musical program auralisations can convey structural and run-time information about Turbo Pascal programs to listeners [3, 4, 10]. Auralisations were effected by mapping program events and structures to musical signature tunes, known as motifs. The design of the motifs was based around the taxonomical nature of the Turbo Pascal language constructs [3]. However, it became clear that as the musical complexity and grammatical rigour of the motifs increased, their discernability by the average user decreased. Therefore, from the lessons learnt from our work we propose a set of organising principles for the design and construction of musically-based program auralisations. These organising principles are aimed towards providing accessible auralisations to the average programmer who has no formal musical training.
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