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how do you call
 

offline nightex from Šiauliai (Lithuania) on 2010-10-06 18:20 [#02395082]
Points: 1275 Status: Lurker | Followup to mohamed: #02395081



Perhaps you see thinks in different way.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-06 18:26 [#02395083]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Followup to nightex: #02395082 | Show recordbag



and it's only me? between the millions of people hit by
electronic music? really? i must some kind of genius, or
there's something going wrong then.


 

offline nightex from Šiauliai (Lithuania) on 2010-10-06 19:06 [#02395091]
Points: 1275 Status: Lurker | Followup to mohamed: #02395083



You said "math is thinking" sry but I dont get it. So maybe
you see stuff I cant see.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-06 23:20 [#02395118]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



the way you decide to proceed at doing something
is the way in which you think your way of doing things is
done
the order, the tone, the moment in which you put some words
into a phrase
sounds like the one used to put notes into music phrases
aaaaand..

any sense?


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-06 23:21 [#02395119]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



it's not the words, the numbers, the notes that make good
talking, good music, or good calculations.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-06 23:22 [#02395121]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



/rant


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-07 13:11 [#02395152]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



thread lacks a book i'll never read

In Music and Probability, David Temperley explores issues
in music perception and cognition from a probabilistic
perspective. The application of probabilistic ideas to music
has been pursued only sporadically over the past four
decades, but the time is ripe, Temperley argues, for a
reconsideration of how probabilities shape music perception
and even music itself. Recent advances in the application of
probability theory to other domains of cognitive modeling,
coupled with new evidence and theoretical insights about the
working of the musical mind, have laid the groundwork for
more fruitful investigations. Temperley proposes
computational models for two basic cognitive processes, the
perception of key and the perception of meter, using
techniques of Bayesian probabilistic modeling. Drawing on
his own research and surveying recent work by others,
Temperley explores a range of further issues in music and
probability, including transcription, phrase perception,
pattern perception, harmony, improvisation, and musical
styles.

Music and Probability—the first full-length book to
explore the application of probabilistic techniques to
musical issues—includes a concise survey of probability
theory, with simple examples and a discussion of its
application in other domains. Temperley relies most heavily
on a Bayesian approach, which not only allows him to model
the perception of meter and tonality but also sheds light on
such perceptual processes as error detection, expectation,
and pitch identification. Bayesian techniques also provide
insights into such subtle and advanced issues as musical
ambiguity, tension, and "grammaticality," and lead to
interesting and novel predictions about compositional
practice and differences between musical styles.


LAZY_TITLE


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-07 13:13 [#02395153]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



what does Bayesian mean


 

offline khrimson from the fridge on 2010-10-07 13:32 [#02395154]
Points: 1757 Status: Regular | Followup to mohamed: #02395153



the thing you are ranting against


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-07 13:40 [#02395155]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Followup to khrimson: #02395154 | Show recordbag



oh


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-07 13:50 [#02395156]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



well, so

while we are here, i propose my model of things:

when one learns a new language, with all its written and
unwirtten rules, the latter being the emotional culture of a
certain group of people upon which the language is founded,
this process can be superimposed and used to perform any
activity related to the aquisition, elaboration and
distribution of data, therefore to any activity related to
communication.

i call this model 'mohamedian'


 

offline RussellDust on 2010-10-07 14:02 [#02395157]
Points: 16053 Status: Lurker



Logic.


 

offline mohamed from the turtle business on 2010-10-07 19:51 [#02395171]
Points: 31145 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Broccoli.


 


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