Difference between revisions of "Students/michaelberger/250B/"
From CCRMA Wiki
(→Background, <i>the Mach 1 </i>[http://cm-wiki.stanford.edu/wiki/Students/michaelberger/220C/ (from Music 220C, Spring 2008)]) |
(→Background, <i>the Mach 1 </i>[http://cm-wiki.stanford.edu/wiki/Students/michaelberger/220C/ (from Music 220C, Spring 2008)]) |
||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
an electroacoustic performance interface. The goals of this specific project | an electroacoustic performance interface. The goals of this specific project | ||
are to take advantage of a simple physical gesture (not previously utilized by | are to take advantage of a simple physical gesture (not previously utilized by | ||
− | an existing acoustic instrument: see | + | an existing acoustic instrument: see next section), and, by incorporating physical |
resistance, create an “easy to learn / difficult to master” interface for the | resistance, create an “easy to learn / difficult to master” interface for the | ||
creation of, and control over real-time electroacoustic performance in both a | creation of, and control over real-time electroacoustic performance in both a |
Revision as of 22:00, 16 March 2009
Contents
MUSIC 250B, Winter 2009, Research Page
This research page has been completed as part of the following assignment:
Wiki "Community Service" Project
As an end-of-term deliverable for 250b, prepare a helpful and factual Wiki page on the ccrma wiki on a topic relevant to the course. The goal of the wiki page is to create a repository for the facts, links and processes which sustained your work in 250b this term. The target audience for this page is the collection of future CCRMA students interested in HCI and music taking the 250 series of courses. Hopefully, your work will not only inspire their future work but will also act as a valuable resource from which they can get a head-start on similar projects, in a sense, "standing on the shoulders of giants" (yes, this means you are all "giants").
GRIP MAESTRO
- need, impetus, intention
- description
Background, the Mach 1 (from Music 220C, Spring 2008)
- Equipment & Parts (Summary -- for more details see my 220C research wiki linked above)
- 1 x GRIP MASTER hand exerciser. (5 lb resistance for each of 6 springs.)
- 6 x Hall Effect Sensors -- available here.
- 6 x (0.0625" 2.45lb Magnets).
- 1 x Arduino Diecimila with 1 x Arduino Protoshield Kit and 1 x mini-bread-board
- Construction
- Tools
- POSTER SESSION @ CCRMA OPEN HOUSE 2008!
Introduction Part of the Michael's ongoing research (supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada), the “GRIP MAESTRO” is the composer's latest attempt to incorporate real physical resistance and haptic feedback into an electroacoustic performance interface. The goals of this specific project are to take advantage of a simple physical gesture (not previously utilized by an existing acoustic instrument: see next section), and, by incorporating physical resistance, create an “easy to learn / difficult to master” interface for the creation of, and control over real-time electroacoustic performance in both a solo and ensemble setting. The “GRIP MAESTRO” is a modified hand exerciser called a “Grip Master” (see figure 2). By measuring the position of the pads on the device and carefully mapping them to parameters of music creation, Michael hopes that the “GRIP MAESTRO” will provide the feel, control, and aural feedback necessary to be an effective interface between performers and their music, and between audiences and their performers. Presently there are two mappings of the control data prepared in the ‘strongly timed’ programming language, “ChucK”. Michael is presently in the planning stages of a third, but there are a multitude of potential applications and mappings for which the “GRIP MAESTRO” is ideal.
~
Movement & Resistance The action of gripping and squeezing by the hand(s) was chosen early on to be the the central aspect of this interface. Many existing acoustic and electro- acoustic instruments rely heavily on the performers hands as driving controlling agents, but few utilize and emphasize the motion of gripping specifically. In order for an interface to take full advantage of the motion of this activity, it needs to provide physical feedback and/or resistance to the activity consistently for the full range of its motion. It is very important to the composer that any given interface feature a real and innate physical feedback/resistance to the performer’s actions so that he or she may feel as closely in tune with that interface as possible and so that the sounds that are produced by the performative actions relate to the nature of the actions themselves.
~
Grip Master A ‘hand-exerciser’ seemed the best choice for a physical object that: a)takes advantage of the full range of motion involved with the action of ‘gripping’, and b)provides real physical feedback/resistance to that action. The ProHands “GRIP MASTER” hand exerciser (available here) was quickly discovered and decided upon by Michael, who was drawn to several of this specific model’s key features. Among these were: each finger has its own independently but equally resistant pad, the palm has its own moderately rotating resistant pad, the devices are available in a number of different resistances, the small, transparent, yet solid construction makes the device easily upgradable, and its plastic body is naturally electrically insulated.
~
Sensors & Sensing In order to translate the position of each of the GRIP MASTER pads to the computer as a number, Michael chose to attach magnets to each pad paired with Magnetic Hall Effect Sensors attached to the central body of the device. A 10-wire ribbon cable is used to connect the necessary Voltage (+5V) and Ground for each of the 6 sensors (each with a wire with which to take readings), and Voltage and Ground for an indicator LED (see circuit diagram and images below). Each sensor and magnet pair needed to be directly aligned (on-axis) to ensure the most linear readings possible. Two sensor/magnet pairs were placed on the palm pad in order to determine the angle of that pad.
CCRMA CONCERT ~ Granular 1.0 Video
The Road to the Mach 2
- revising the Mach 1
- hardware
- software
- arduino
- mappings
- expanded intentions
- the plan
- new parts
- new construction (ongoing)
- new mappings (forthcoming)