Onward! 2015
Sun 25 - Fri 30 October 2015 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
co-located with SPLASH 2015
Thu 29 Oct 2015 14:37 - 15:00 at Grand Station 3-5 - Session the Second Chair(s): Karim Ali

In the Western classical tradition, musicians play music from notated sheet music, called a score. When playing music from a score, a musician translates its visual symbols into sequences of instrument-specific physical motions. Hence, a music score’s overall complexity represents a sum of the cognitive and mechanical acuity required for its performance. For a given instrument, different notes, intervals, articulations, dynamics, key signatures, and tempo represent dissimilar levels of difficulty, which vary depending on the performer’s proficiency. Individual musicians embrace this tenet, but may disagree about the degrees of difficulty.

This paper introduces musiplectics (music + plectics, Greek for the study of complexity), a systematic and objective approach to computational assessment of the complexity of a music score for any instrument. Musiplectics defines computing paradigms for automatically and accurately calculating the complexity of playing a music score on a given instrument. The core concept codifies a two-phase process. First, music experts rank the relative difficulty of individual musical components (e.g., notes, intervals, dynamics, etc.) for different playing proficiencies and instruments. Second, a computing engine automatically applies this ranking to music scores and calculates their respective complexity. As a proof-of-concept of musiplectics, we present an automated, Web-based application called Musical Complexity Scoring (MCS) for music educators and performers. Musiplectics can engender the creation of practical computing tools for objective and expeditious assessment of a music score’s suitability for the abilities of intended performers.

Thu 29 Oct

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13:30 - 15:00
Session the SecondOnward! Papers at Grand Station 3-5
Chair(s): Karim Ali TU Darmstadt
13:30
22m
Talk
Just-in-Time Data Structures
Onward! Papers
Mattias De Wael Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Stefan Marr INRIA, France, Joeri De Koster Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Jennifer B. Sartor Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Wolfgang De Meuter Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Link to publication DOI
13:52
22m
Talk
Separation of Powers in the Cloud: Where Applications and Users Become Peers
Onward! Papers
David H. Lorenz Open University and Technion IIT, Boaz Rosenan University of Haifa
Media Attached
14:15
22m
Talk
Slimming Languages by Reducing Sugar: A Case for Semantics-Altering Transformations
Onward! Papers
Junsong Li Brown University, Justin Pombrio , Joe Gibbs Politz Swarthmore College, Shriram Krishnamurthi Brown University
Media Attached
14:37
22m
Talk
Musiplectics: Computational Assessment of the Complexity of Music Scores
Onward! Papers
Ethan Holder Virginia Tech, Eli Tilevich Virginia Tech, Amy Gillick Virginia Tech