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This book discusses the principles, methodologies, and challenges
of robotic musicianship through an in-depth review of the work
conducted at the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology (GTCMT),
where the concept was first developed. Robotic musicianship is a
relatively new research field that focuses on the design and
development of intelligent music-making machines. The motivation
behind the field is to develop robots that not only generate music,
but also collaborate with humans by listening and responding in an
expressive and creative manner. This combination of human and
machine creativity has the potential to surprise and inspire us to
play, listen, compose, and think about music in new ways. The book
provides an in-depth view of the robotic platforms designed at the
GTCMT Robotic Musicianship Group, including the improvisational
robotic percussionists Haile and Shimon, the personal robotic
companion Shimi, and a number of wearable robots, such as the
Robotic Drumming Prosthesis, The Third Drumming Arm, and the
Skywalker Piano Hand. The book discusses numerous research studies
based on these platforms in the context of five main principles:
Listen like a Human, Play Like a Machine, Be Social, Watch and
Learn, and Wear It.
This book discusses the principles, methodologies, and challenges
of robotic musicianship through an in-depth review of the work
conducted at the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology (GTCMT),
where the concept was first developed. Robotic musicianship is a
relatively new research field that focuses on the design and
development of intelligent music-making machines. The motivation
behind the field is to develop robots that not only generate music,
but also collaborate with humans by listening and responding in an
expressive and creative manner. This combination of human and
machine creativity has the potential to surprise and inspire us to
play, listen, compose, and think about music in new ways. The book
provides an in-depth view of the robotic platforms designed at the
GTCMT Robotic Musicianship Group, including the improvisational
robotic percussionists Haile and Shimon, the personal robotic
companion Shimi, and a number of wearable robots, such as the
Robotic Drumming Prosthesis, The Third Drumming Arm, and the
Skywalker Piano Hand. The book discusses numerous research studies
based on these platforms in the context of five main principles:
Listen like a Human, Play Like a Machine, Be Social, Watch and
Learn, and Wear It.
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