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Robots write songs together?

November 6th 2008 21:21
robots write songs
Signature Tune




From: ElectronicsWeekly.com



by Steve Bush
Wednesday 5 November 2008

A UK scientist has persuaded robots to sing to one another, in research that has implications for co-operating autonomous machines.


"At the end of the day, this is not only about music. Robots could agree collective strategies to perform a task together, and develop learning strategies to come to agreed tasks quickly," Professor Eduardo Miranda of the University of Plymouth told Electronics Weekly.
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According to Miranda, the human brain processes different aspects of music in various places, some of which may be specific to music and some of which are not so specific. Functioning altogether, the brain uses these different brain functions to relate heard sequences to remembered sequences.

Miranda's robots mimic human vocal tract and hearing, and are programmed to behave like certain brain functions thought to exist in humans that recognise when a sound they hear is similar to a sound their host has produced.

Initially, the Plymouth robots babble melodies randomly.


When incoming sounds are judged similar to remembered sounds, the robot can respond with an imitation of the incoming sound.


"The task is to produce two sounds alike," said Miranda. "The robots have a set of criteria to select sounds. Certain sounds are discarded and certain sounds are kept."

Up to 20 virtual robots have been run in an experiment, picked randomly in pairs to spend some time interacting in the actual robots - DRK8000s from Dr Robot.

With more cash there would be more real robots, but why not model the whole thing in a computer?

"I have done so," said Miranda who is Professor of Computer Music. "I moved to real robots because I want eventually to have robots that interact with humans. Eventually they will learn from me and I will learn from them."

According to Miranda, attempts so far to persuade machines to make music together have used abstract algorithms embodying pattern generation features suitable for making music: cellular automata and particle swarms for example or music knowledge-based techniques: symbolic machine learning or neural networks, armed with music theory and learning from existing music.

The former tend to produce complex material few people recognise as music, and the latter generally produce music similar to the training pieces.

His approach differs in avoiding manually programming prescribed rules for generating music, but attempts to programme the robots with the ability to develop suitable musical rules themselves.

To keep things simple, only short tone sequences have been allowed in Miranda's experiments, stored as parameters that describe lung pressure, throat position and vocal chord tension for each tone.

In a typical interaction giving pairs 20s to communicate, a group of five robots developed on average 19 tunes each, mostly settling by 2,000 interactions.







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Comments
11 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by Lester Caudill

November 6th 2008 23:16
Hey katyzzz technology is moving fast all the time, now if they could use some of it in the medical field that would great.

Comment by katyzzz

November 6th 2008 23:31
Rest assured, Lester, they are doing that already.

Comment by Louie

November 7th 2008 00:41
cool........ if only the technology of ncreasing the number of hours in the day

Comment by katyzzz

November 7th 2008 01:38
No, no, no, Louie, man mucked up the weather, let him not muck up the day. God and nature does it better.

Do you really want to wear yourself out. I don't.

Comment by Nevar

November 7th 2008 03:49
I've been pulling for a 26 hour day for years. The extra 2 hours would allow me to find my glasses every day without cutting into my nap time.

Comment by katyzzz

November 7th 2008 04:17
At your age, NEVAR, and you look so young, don't worry if the day was extended the government would find some extra forms for you to fill in.

But, bless me, fancy seeing you here, reminds me of someone I know, the name slips my mind just at present.

Whoever it was, I hate to tell you, he had more personality than you, but he too liked to take his cothes off, I remember him on the stairs.

I'm much more conservative, of course, lovely to get to know you. You have much more hair so I guess that and that lean feminine look sets you apart.

But wasn't this post about robots?

Comment by Nevar

November 7th 2008 04:49
Huh? I forgot, your comment imparted a vision onto my remaining brain cells that I can't escape, ouch! The pain.

Comment by katyzzz

November 7th 2008 05:48
Brain cells are not meant to hurt, they have no nerve supply - worried!

Comment by Nevar

November 7th 2008 06:29
oh.

Comment by katyzzz

November 7th 2008 19:42
Garrett, great to have you along for a visit.

I tried the link and found it interesting but when I tried doing things there it suddenly cut out, I'll try to have another go later on.

I'd love to see you anytime for a visit.

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