International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression •
NIME 2022
Liberating Methods for
Music Interaction
Tom Mudd Simon Holland
Published on: Jun 22, 2022
URL: https://nime.pubpub.org/pub/djukhlc2
License: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0)
International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression • NIME 2022
Liberating Methods for Music Interaction
Workshop Title
Liberating Methods for Music Interaction
Choice of two workshops for different time zones.
Workshop 1
16:00-19:00 BST on 28 June (UTC+1) - Americas/Europe/Africa
With guest speakers Alan Blackwell and Filipe Calegario
Workshop 2
09:00-12:00 BST on 29 June (UTC+1) - Europe/Africa/New Zealand/Oceania/Asia
With guest speakers Sofian Audry, Filipe Calegario and Steve Benford
Description (up to 750 words)
Workshop attendees are encouraged to arrive with a particular research question
they’d like to address, but for which they are not sure how to proceed
methodologically. The aim is for attendees to be able to explore their research problem
in a very open, fun, non-judgemental environment, and to take in perspectives from
other attendees and the invited speakers, leaving the workshop with a wider
perspective on what might be possible and useful to them. It is hoped that this will
lead to cross-pollination between institutions and disciplines, which can sometimes
focus on an unnecessarily narrow range of methods.
Researchers on interfaces for music are situated in a wide range of academic
disciplines, including music, computer science, human computer interaction and
psychology, and often work in relative isolation from other researchers with similar
interests. Historically this has sometimes led to new (or even experienced) researchers
perceiving themselves to be constrained to use only methodologies well-trodden within
their host discipline, even when these may be ill-matched to the questions of real
interest, leading to less interesting research questions being addressed.
This practical problem-solving workshop will look at how to find and adapt
methodologies that fit whatever questions a researcher in music interaction actually
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International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression • NIME 2022
Liberating Methods for Music Interaction
wants to ask, and, importantly, how to justify such methodologies clearly to
supervisors, students, examiners, funding bodies and referees who may be unfamiliar
both with music and less well known approaches.
Following brief introductory presentations from the invited speakers, each attendee
who wants to will present their issue to the group as a 3-5min lightning talk. The group
will then be split into subgroups to explore methodological approaches to their specific
problems, either choosing a single issue from the group to discuss, or rotating to
consider each member’s issue in turn. Towards the end of the session, the subgroups
will report back to the main group, for wider discussion and critique with the invited
speakers. Finally, the invited speakers and workshop organisers will present
reflections on the session.
This practical workshop is aimed at NIME researchers interested in thinking more
widely about methods. NIME researchers have historically drawn on a very broad
range of methods from diverse fields. This can make things difficult for PhD students
and early career researchers attempting to orient themselves in the field, and to find
relevant and rigorous methods of inquiry relevant to their research questions. There
are also new challenges in devising appropriate methodologies for research
perspectives beyond those of the global North.
The workshop will be facilitated by a group of experienced PhD supervisors, referees
and successful bid writers in areas related to NIME, including representatives from a
range of host disciplines including Music, HCI, Psychology, AI and Computer Science.
The invited speakers between them have a breadth of experience across NIME and
beyond into the wider domains of HCI, or practice/artistic-based research, and
interaction design
Short Description (up to 70 words)
Workshop attendees are encouraged to arrive with a research question where they are
not sure how to proceed methodologically. Following brief presentations from invited
speakers, attendees may present 3-5 min lightning talks. The workshop will then split
into groups to explore issues and solutions, reporting back to the main group for
discussion and reflection. The workshop will be facilitated by experienced PhD
supervisors, referees and successful bid writers.
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International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression • NIME 2022
Liberating Methods for Music Interaction
Organizers
Simon Holland, Music Computing Lab, The Open University.
[email protected]
Tom Mudd, Reid School of Music, University of Edinburgh
[email protected]
Tom and Simon co-chaired the CHI 2016 Workshop on Music and HCI 2016, and coedited New Directions in Music and Human-Computer Interaction (2019) from
Springer. They are Co-Is of the CHIME EPSRC Network in Music and Human
Computer Interaction. Simon is founder and Director of the Music Computing Lab at
the Open University. He has been PI or Co-I on ten external research grants, totalling
nearly £4.5 million, funded by the EU, AHRC, ESRC and Innovate UK. He has
successfully supervised seventeen PhDs and externally examined twenty PhDs in the
UK and overseas, mostly in Music and HCI, covering a wide variety of methodologies.
Tom is Lecturer in Music at the University of Edinburgh. He has published research on
Music and HCI in the International Journal of Human-Computer studies, Computer
Music Journal, and the Journal of Music Technology and Education.
Additional Speakers (optional)
Sofian Audry - Université du Québec à Montréal
Steve Benford - Mixed Reality Lab, University of Nottingham
Alan Blackwell - University of Cambridge Global Challenges Initiative
Filipe C. A, Calegario - Universidade Federal de Pernambuco
With support from members of CHIME (EPSRC Network in Music and Human
Computer Interaction: https://chime.pubpub.org/people)
Length of Workshop
Choice of two 3 hour workshops for different time zones:
Workshop 1 - 16:00-19:00 BST on 28 June (UTC+1)
Workshop 2 - 09:00-12:00 BST on 29 June (UTC+1)
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International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression • NIME 2022
Technical and Space Requirements
The workshop will be virtual and take place on Zoom
Links to Supporting Media (optional)
https://chime.pubpub.org/chime-nime-22
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Liberating Methods for Music Interaction