ShIFT: A Semi-haptic Interface for Flute Tutoring

March 18, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› New Interfaces for Musical Expression

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Authors Gus Xia, Carter Jacobsen, Qianwen Chen, Xingdong Yang, Roger Dannenberg arXiv ID 1803.06625 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Citations 13 Venue New Interfaces for Musical Expression Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Traditional instrument learning is time-consuming. It begins with learning music notation and necessitates layers of sophistication and abstraction. Haptic interfaces open another door to the music world for the vast majority of beginners when traditional training methods are not effective. However, existing haptic interfaces can only deal with specially designed pieces with great restrictions on performance duration and pitch range due to the fact that not all performance motions could be guided haptically for most instruments. Our system breaks such restrictions using a semi-haptic interface. For the first time, the pitch range of the haptically learned pieces goes beyond an octave (with the fingering motion covers most of the possible choices) and the duration of learned pieces cover a whole phrase. This significant change leads to a more realistic instrument learning process. Experiments show that our semi-haptic interface is effective as long as learners are not "tone deaf." Using our prototype device, the learning rate is about 30% faster compared to learning from videos.
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