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Intelligent DJ Emerges from Fundamental Research A project supported by the Austrian Science Fund FWF has made the leap from research bench to shop shelf and is breathing musical intelligence into a digital audio system. This achievement has been made possible by a computer algorithm that is the first to enable the automatic creation of customised playlists directly in a hi-fi. The algorithm identifies specific musical characteristics such as rhythm and compares stored audio files for similarities. The know-how behind this system was developed some time ago with support from the FWF - and is now being used in a new music system from Bang & Olufsen. Endless musical enjoyment to your own individual taste and no need to create a playlist - it sounds like the music of the future. But it is not - a new computer algorithm has made all this possible here and now. The scientific know-how behind the development has been provided by Prof. Gerhard Widmer, Head of the Institute for Computational Perception at Johannes Kepler University Linz and Member of the Scientific Board of the Austrian Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence (OFAI) in Vienna. Several years ago, Prof. Widmer and his team realised that the rapid growth in the use of digital music files was producing a need for new computer methods. And one result of his research work is now available in all good music stores and is at the heart of the BeoSound 5 digital audio system from Bang & Olufsen - the MOTS computer algorithm. MOTS operates like a personal DJ and demonstrates impressive musical intelligence. The algorithm analyzes audio files, extracting "features" that it then uses to calculate the similarities between various pieces of music. Depending on the audio file selected, MOTS automatically searches out similar files and does its name justice - it tracks down More Of The Same. "Algo-Rhythm" MOTS uses statistical methods to decide which piece is the most similar to another - but doesn't just do so in an experimental setting. MOTS is the core technology in the first stereo system to offer musical intelligence and is exceptionally user friendly. The system, which creates intelligent playlists that are customised for the individual user, is compatible with all current formats such as MP3, WMA and AAC. Fundamental Research that Rocks However, this success is not the end of the road for Prof. Widmer and his team. Further ambitious goals that the research team is working towards include the visualisation of large music collections, computer models of expression in music, the automatic retrieval of music-relevant information from the Internet, and computers that can follow music in real time. There is no doubt that the future will bring new technologies that will make digital music a great deal easier to manage - also thanks to the support of the FWF. Scientific contact Austrian Science Fund FWF Copy Editing & Distribution Vienna, 22 June 2009
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Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Haus der Forschung, Sensengasse 1, 1090 Vienna T +43-1-505 67 40 F +43-1-505 67 39 office@fwf.ac.at - www.fwf.ac.at |
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