Auditory display : sonification, audification, and auditory interfaces

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Auditory display : sonification, audification, and auditory interfaces

editor, Gregory Kramer

(Santa Fe Institute studies in the sciences of complexity, v. 18)

Addison-Wesley, c1994

  • pbk.

Available at  / 17 libraries

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Note

"In October 1992, the First International Conference on Auditory Display (ICAD) convened in Santa Fe, New Mexico under the sponsorship of the Santa Fe Institute"--CIP pref

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This collection of papers provides the reader with a distillation of the current state of the art in auditory display techniques, as well as the first published volume on the newly emerging technology of sonification.. }The blessing of the information age is that doctors, scientists, and researchers of all kinds have more information at their disposal than they have ever had before. The curse of the information age is that all this generated data has led to overload, the result being that data now serves to confuse almost as much as it clarifies. One method for dealing with this overwhelming amount of data is to display it in one form or another, and the most popular way of displaying data in recent years has been through visualization techniques, e.g., graphs, bar diagrams, time series plots, etc. These techniques have been extremely useful. However, they have their limitations, and researchers are now exploring alternative methods. One of the most promising types of new methods is the subject of this important volume.We frequently fail to appreciate how adept people are at interpreting sounds, especially very subtle ones. Recognizing the strength of the auditory sense, researchers have been developing tools that promise to be useful in real-time applications, from the monitoring of hospital operating rooms to the stress-filled task of air traffic control. Now, sonification (the display of data through sound) provides new tools for recognizing patterns and analyzing data, extending the process of discovery in such diverse fields as parallel computer programming, geophysics, financial market analysis, and computational fluid dynamics. }

Table of Contents

  • Foreword (Albert Bregman)
  • An Introduction to Auditory Display (Gregory Kramer)
  • Delivery of Information Through Sound (James A. Ballas)
  • Perceptual Principles in Sound Grouping (Sheila M. Williams)
  • Spatial Sound and Sonification (Elizabeth M. Wenzel)
  • Pattern and Reference in Auditory Display (Robin Bargar)
  • Environments for Exploring Auditory Representations of Multidimensional Data (Stuart Smith, Ronald M. Pickett, and Marian G. Williams)
  • Some Organizing Principles for Representing Data with Sound (Gregory Kramer)
  • Sound Synthesis Algorithms for Auditory Data Representations (Carla Scaletti)
  • Sonnet: Audio-Enhanced Monitoring and Debugging (David H. Jameson)
  • A Framework for Sonification Design (Tara M. Madhyastha and Daniel A. Reed)
  • Synchronization of Visual and Aural Parallel Program Performance Data (Jay Alan Jackson and Joan M. Francioni)
  • Sonifying the Body Electric: Superiority of an Auditory over a Visual Display in a Complex, Multivariate System (W. Tecumeseh Fitch and Gregory Kramer)
  • Auditory Display of Computational Fluid Dynamics Data (Kevin McCabe and Akil Rangwalla)
  • Musical Structures in Data from Chaotic Attractors (Gottfried Mayer-Kress, Robin Bargar, and Insook Choi)
  • Listening to the Earth Sing (Chris Hayward)
  • Multivariate Data Mappings (Sara Bly).

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