Research Log: Difference between revisions
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Open up new auditory perceptions? | Open up new auditory perceptions? | ||
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=== Pitch definition === | |||
'''From britanica''' <br> | |||
pitch, in music, position of a single sound in the complete range of sound. Sounds are higher or lower in pitch according to the frequency of vibration of the sound waves producing them. A high frequency (e.g., 880 hertz [Hz; cycles per second]) is perceived as a high pitch and a low frequency (e.g., 55 Hz) as a low pitch. | |||
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https://www.britannica.com/art/pitch-music | |||
=== On fundamental frequency f0 === | === On fundamental frequency f0 === | ||
The fundamental frequency of a speech signal, often denoted by F0 or F0, refers to the approximate frequency of the (quasi-)periodic structure of voiced speech signals. <br> | The fundamental frequency of a speech signal, often denoted by F0 or F0, refers to the approximate frequency of the (quasi-)periodic structure of voiced speech signals. <br> |
Revision as of 14:12, 20 March 2023
Pitch Classification
Voices are classified as:
Female norm: mean F0 of 196-224 Hz
Male norm: mean F0 107-132 Hz
Gender is a spectrum,-not just binary (male vs female)and also not purely categorical
How to reeceive voice as a data and then reproduce it in ways that deconstruct the gender classification?
Open up new auditory perceptions?
Pitch definition
From britanica
pitch, in music, position of a single sound in the complete range of sound. Sounds are higher or lower in pitch according to the frequency of vibration of the sound waves producing them. A high frequency (e.g., 880 hertz [Hz; cycles per second]) is perceived as a high pitch and a low frequency (e.g., 55 Hz) as a low pitch.
https://www.britannica.com/art/pitch-music
On fundamental frequency f0
The fundamental frequency of a speech signal, often denoted by F0 or F0, refers to the approximate frequency of the (quasi-)periodic structure of voiced speech signals.
https://wiki.aalto.fi/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=149890776
Spectogram and Voice
Queer Listening and Queer Timbre
Timbre Visualisation
Try to talk on the microphone and see different types of visualisation through pure data. This can also work with vocal samples