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Basic Gestures as Spatiotemporal Reference Frames for Repetitive Dance/Music Patterns in Samba and Charleston
Author(s) -
Marc Leman,
Luiz Naveda
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
music perception an interdisciplinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.584
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1533-8312
pISSN - 0730-7829
DOI - 10.1525/mp.2010.28.1.71
Subject(s) - dance , gesture , action (physics) , frame of reference , perception , communication , reference frame , movement (music) , motion (physics) , frame (networking) , psychology , musical , computer science , cognitive psychology , artificial intelligence , visual arts , acoustics , art , neuroscience , telecommunications , physics , quantum mechanics
THE GOAL OF THE PRESENT STUDY IS TO GAIN BETTER insight into how dancers establish, through dancing, a spatiotemporal reference frame in synchrony with musical cues. With the aim of achieving this, repetitive dance patterns of samba and Charleston were recorded using a three-dimensional motion capture system. Geometric patterns then were extracted from each joint of the dancer's body. The method uses a body-centered reference frame and decomposes the movement into non-orthogonal periodicities that match periods of the musical meter. Musical cues (such as meter and loudness) as well as action-based cues (such as velocity) can be projected onto the patterns, thus providing spatiotemporal reference frames, or 'basic gestures,' for action-perception couplings. Conceptually speaking, the spatiotemporal reference frames control minimum effort points in action-perception couplings. They reside as memory patterns in the mental and/or motor domains, ready to be dynamically transformed in dance movements. The present study raises a number of hypotheses related to spatial cognition that may serve as guiding principles for future dance/music studies

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