Using Note-Level Music Encodings to Facilitate Interdisciplinary Research on Human Engagement with Music. Devaney, J. Transactions of the International Society for Music Information Retrieval, 3(1):205–217, oct, 2020.
Using Note-Level Music Encodings to Facilitate Interdisciplinary Research on Human Engagement with Music [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Music encoding can link disparate types of musical data for the purposes of archiving and search. The encoding of human response data explicitly in relation to musical notes facilitates the study of the ways humans engage with music as performers and listeners. This paper reflects on the developments and trends in formal music encoding systems as well as the types of data representations used in corpora released by researchers working on expert music analyses, musical performances, and listener responses. It argues that while the specificity (and often simplicity) afforded by project-specific encoding formats may be useful for individual research projects, larger-scale interdisciplinary research would be better served by explicit, formalized linking of data to specific musical elements. The paper concludes by offering some concrete suggestions for how to achieve this goal.
@Article{          devaney2020-using,
    author       = {Devaney, Johanna},
    year         = {2020},
    title        = {Using Note-Level Music Encodings to Facilitate
                   Interdisciplinary Research on Human Engagement with
                   Music},
    abstract     = {Music encoding can link disparate types of musical data
                   for the purposes of archiving and search. The encoding of
                   human response data explicitly in relation to musical
                   notes facilitates the study of the ways humans engage with
                   music as performers and listeners. This paper reflects on
                   the developments and trends in formal music encoding
                   systems as well as the types of data representations used
                   in corpora released by researchers working on expert music
                   analyses, musical performances, and listener responses. It
                   argues that while the specificity (and often simplicity)
                   afforded by project-specific encoding formats may be
                   useful for individual research projects, larger-scale
                   interdisciplinary research would be better served by
                   explicit, formalized linking of data to specific musical
                   elements. The paper concludes by offering some concrete
                   suggestions for how to achieve this goal.},
    doi          = {10.5334/tismir.56},
    issn         = {2514-3298},
    journal      = {Transactions of the International Society for Music
                   Information Retrieval},
    keywords     = {computational musicology,listener,music analysis,music
                   encoding,music performance,musical elements,musical
                   notes},
    mendeley-tags= {computational musicology},
    month        = {oct},
    number       = {1},
    pages        = {205--217},
    url          = {http://transactions.ismir.net/articles/10.5334/tismir.56/},
    volume       = {3}
}

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