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Feeling the beat where it counts: fostering multi-limb rhythm skills with the haptic drum kit

Holland, Simon; Bouwer, Anders and Dalgleish, Mat (2010). Feeling the beat where it counts: fostering multi-limb rhythm skills with the haptic drum kit. In: Proceedings of Tangible and Embedded Interaction 2010, 25-27 Jan 2010, Cambridge, MA.

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URL: http://www.tei-conf.org/11/hm/
DOI (Digital Object Identifier) Link: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1145/1709886.1709887
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Abstract

This paper introduces and explores a tool known as the Haptic Drum Kit. The Haptic Drum Kit employs four computer-controlled vibrotactile devices, one attached to each limb via the wrists and ankles. In the mode of use discussed in this paper, haptic pulses are used to guide the playing, on a drum kit, of rhythmic patterns that require multi-limb co-ordination. The immediate aim is to foster rhythm skills and multi-limb coordination. A broader aim is to systematically develop skills in recognizing, identifying, memorizing, retaining, analyzing, reproducing and composing monophonic and polyphonic rhythms. We consider the implications of three different theories for this approach: the work of the music educator Dalcroze (1865-1950 [1]; the entrainment theory of human rhythm perception and production [2,3]; and sensory motor contingency theory [4]. In this paper we introduce the Haptic Drum Kit; consider the implications of the above theories for this approach; report on a design study; and identify and discuss a variety of emerging design issues. As part of the design study, audio and haptic guidance was compared for five people learning to play polyphonic drum patterns of varying complexity. The results indicate that beginning drummers are able to learn intricate drum patterns from the haptic stimuli alone, although haptic plus audio is the mode of presentation preferred by subjects.

Item Type: Conference Item
Copyright Holders: 2010 ACM
Keywords: haptic drum kit; haptic interaction; vibrotactile; dalcroze; drumming instruction; multi-limb coordination; rhythm; polyphonic rhythm; guidance; entrainment; embodied cognition; sensory motor contingency; temporal patterns
Academic Unit/Department: Mathematics, Computing and Technology > Computing
Interdisciplinary Research Centre: Centre for Research in Computing (CRC)
Item ID: 18899
Depositing User: Simon Holland
Date Deposited: 16 Jul 2010 15:39
Last Modified: 20 Feb 2013 21:38
URI: http://oro.open.ac.uk/id/eprint/18899

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