Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution
Musicology is a growing focus in computer science. Past research has had success in automatically generating music through learning-based agents that make use of neural networks and through model and rule-based approaches. These methods require a significant amount of information, ei- ther in th...
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ph-ateneo-arc.theses-dissertations-16502021-10-06T05:00:04Z Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution Samson, Aran Musicology is a growing focus in computer science. Past research has had success in automatically generating music through learning-based agents that make use of neural networks and through model and rule-based approaches. These methods require a significant amount of information, ei- ther in the form of a large dataset for learning or a comprehensive set of rules based on musical concepts. This paper explores a model in which a minimal amount of musical information is needed to compose a desired style of music. This paper takes from two concepts, objectness, and evolutionary computation. The concept of objectness, an idea directly derived from im- agery and pattern recognition, was used to extract specific musical objects from single musical inputs which are then used as the foundation to algo- rithmically produce musical pieces that are similar in style to the original inputes. These musical pieces are the product of evolutionary algorithms which implement a sequential evolution approach wherein a generated out- put may or may not yet be fully within the fitness thresholds of the input pieces. This method eliminates the need for a large amount of pre-provided data as well as the need for long processing times that are commonly asso- ciated with machine-learned art-pieces. This study aims to show a proof of concept of the implementation of the described model. 2021-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/524 Theses and Dissertations (All) Archīum Ateneo n/a |
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Musicology is a growing focus in computer science. Past research has had success in automatically generating music through learning-based agents that make use of neural networks and through model and rule-based approaches. These methods require a significant amount of information, ei- ther in the form of a large dataset for learning or a comprehensive set of rules based on musical concepts. This paper explores a model in which a minimal amount of musical information is needed to compose a desired style of music. This paper takes from two concepts, objectness, and evolutionary computation. The concept of objectness, an idea directly derived from im- agery and pattern recognition, was used to extract specific musical objects from single musical inputs which are then used as the foundation to algo- rithmically produce musical pieces that are similar in style to the original inputes. These musical pieces are the product of evolutionary algorithms which implement a sequential evolution approach wherein a generated out- put may or may not yet be fully within the fitness thresholds of the input pieces. This method eliminates the need for a large amount of pre-provided data as well as the need for long processing times that are commonly asso- ciated with machine-learned art-pieces. This study aims to show a proof of concept of the implementation of the described model. |
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Samson, Aran |
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Samson, Aran |
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Samson, Aran |
title |
Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution |
title_short |
Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution |
title_full |
Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution |
title_fullStr |
Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution |
title_full_unstemmed |
Reproducing Musicality: Emulating Human Musicality through Immediate Learning and Sequential Evolution |
title_sort |
reproducing musicality: emulating human musicality through immediate learning and sequential evolution |
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Archīum Ateneo |
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2021 |
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https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/524 |
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