Event

CIRMMT Distinguished Lecture Series : Julius Smith, Stanford University "Sound synthesis based on physical models"

Thursday, September 16, 2010 16:30
Pollack Hall, CA, 555 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, QC, CA
Price: 
Entrée libre

 

Sound synthesis based on computational physical models promises the most complete and compact rendering of performance expression.  This talk will review various modeling paradigms in more or less historical order.  After a recap of foundational ideas from Bernoulli and d'Alembert, block diagrams, summaries, and sound examples will be presented for various synthesis models, including the Kelly-Lochbaum-Mathews singing voice, and digital waveguide models of plucked/struck strings, woodwinds, bowed strings, distortion-feedback electric guitar, and piano/harpsichord. Finally, recent related research and software development at CCRMA will be summarized.

 

JULIUS SMITH:

Julius O. Smith teaches a music signal-processing course sequence and supervises related research at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA).  He is formally a professor of music and associate professor (by courtesy) of electrical engineering at Stanford University. In 1975, he received his BS/EE degree from Rice University, where he got a good start in the field of digital signal processing and modeling for control.  In 1983, he received the PhD/EE degree from Stanford University, specializing in techniques for digital filter design and system identification, with application to violin modeling.  His work history includes the Signal Processing Department at Electromagnetic Systems Laboratories, Inc., working on systems for digital communications, the Adaptive Systems Department at Systems Control Technology, Inc., working on research problems in adaptive filtering and spectral estimation, and NeXT Computer, Inc., where he was responsible for sound, mu  sic, and signal processing software for the NeXT computer workstation.  Prof. Smith is a Fellow of the Audio Engineering Society and the Acoustical Society of America.  He is the author of four online books and numerous research publications in his field. For further information, see http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/.

 

A complete list of CIRMMT Distinguished Lectures in the Science and Technology of Music for 2010-2011 is found by clicking on the following link:

http://www.cirmmt.mcgill.ca/activities/distinguished-lectures

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