-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
Homework MimiY 01
mimiyin edited this page Nov 30, 2023
·
59 revisions
-
RESOURCES FROM CLASS:
-
READ AND WATCH:
- Read Machines Beat Humans on a Reading Test. But Do They Understand?
- What does it mean to understanding something?
- Watch Teachable Machine: Image Classification
- Extra: Next Gen ml5 Examples | Documentation
- Read Machines Beat Humans on a Reading Test. But Do They Understand?
-
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
-
DO:
- Complete this Worksheet
- Start gathering questions, code samples and source material (images, sounds, colors, text) for your final project.
- Check out the project inspiration page.
- 2022 Finals:
- Elif: Fake or Real
- Tom: Self-Portrait Builder
- Kota: Particle Sound Visualizer
- Anvay + Peter: Karaoke for One
- Orpheus: Polysynthesizer
- Yuke: Parameterized FlowField
- Lan: Heart Rate Clock
-
RESOURCES FROM CLASS:
- Sound Part 2
- Code Examples:
- Listening Examples
-
DO:
- Work in pairs. Due next week. Build a 60s algorithmic sound composition. No visuals. Just sound.
- You can use samples, looping and interaction, but be sure to incorporate an algorithmic component to your composition.
- Prepare 1-3 words to describe the piece. Listen to what you've made. Adjust your words.
- Create a blog post documenting your work. Also include links to other projects that serve as references, inspiration, or deal with similar ideas as your piece.
- Ideas for what you could do:
- Design a melody using this process and figure out an algorithmic way to generate it.
- Record bits of spoken word and loop them to create music. See SoundRecorder() Looper
- Use sound samples and manipulate their playback rate() to control pitch instead of the oscillator.
- Try implementing a different scale with different pitch ratios: More about scales.
- Play with Timbre and make use of p5 Sound's post-processing features: Delay, Filter, Reverb, Convolver etc.
- Work in pairs. Due next week. Build a 60s algorithmic sound composition. No visuals. Just sound.
-
READ AND WATCH:
- Your Name -- [Title of Blog Post](Link to Blog Post), [Title of Sketch](Link to Code)
- Ming and Sahal -- Week 11, Tinnitus Relief 10 Hours Noise Blocker Deep Layered Brown Noise Binaural ASMR Remastered Natural Sound For Worse Focus And Sleep
- Josh Cassidy Shohnigor -- Ariel lost it
- Tamanna and Zoey - Sound play
- Yidan & Xinyu - music
- Octavio & Chienn -1456, Blog Post
-
RESOURCES FROM CLASS:
-
DO:
- Complete this worksheet.
- Train your ears - Follow the directions at the top of the sketch. Save an image of your best attempt and upload it here.
- Work in pairs. Due in 2 weeks. Create a 60s sound composition. No visuals. Just sound.
- What parameters of sound are you working with? Texture, rhythm, melody, something else?
- Prepare 2-5 words to describe the sound as it progresses over the 60s.
- Create a blog post documenting your work. Include links to other projects that serve as references, inspiration, or deal with similar ideas as your piece.
-
READ AND WATCH:
- Watch: Notes and Neurons: In Search of the Common Chorus
- The Complete Guide to Spotify's Algorithm
- Reflection: Come to class prepared to talk about: What characteristics of music are they talking about in the Notes and Neurons panel? What characteristics of music are the algorithms in Spotify most concerned about?
- Short videos and articles:
- Why repeating words sound like music to your brain - Focus on the last example: "But they sometimes behave so strangely."
- Solfege Tutorial | Video
- Introduction to the noise() function: Tutorial | Reference
-
RESOURCES FROM CLASS:
-
DO:
- Work in pairs. Due next week. Manipulate an image or video at the pixel level*. No sound. The image should change over the course of the minute. Use the properties of color to focus our attention.
- Demo your experience in class:
- Use the p5 editor's fullscreen link to show your project fullscreen
- Use createCanvas(windowWidth, windowHeight);
- Position and size screen elements in relation to the canvas width and height.
- If your image is not big enough to fill the entire screen, be mindful about the color you select for the canvas.
- Create a blog post documenting your work. Address / include the following:
- Choose 2-5 words to describe how the image changes over time.
- Links to other projects that serve as references, inspiration, or deal with similar ideas as your piece.
- Consult resources from syllabus for inspiration. Pixels Week 1 | Pixels Week 2
-
READ AND WATCH:
- Sound Videos Focus on: Loading + Playing, Timing, Jumps + Cues, Amplitude Analysis, Mic Input, Sound Viz | Code
- Chapter 13 through Ex. 13.3 of Getting Started with p5.js book - Ebook (free with NYU Library login)
- More sound stuff
- Josh and Yidan-- wait what
- Tamanna, Chienn, Cassidy -- Scanning
- Sahal, Octavio -- Week 9, another noise
- Xinyu,Shohnigor-- Week 8-9 blog post, Memory
- Zoey, Ming -- https://editor.p5js.org/ZoeyFerguson0/full/gYJz1RS_f
-
RESOURCES FROM CLASS:
-
DO:
- Complete this worksheet.
- Work in pairs. Due in 2 weeks. Create and/or manipulate an image or video at the pixel level to create an alternative of the reality depicted in the source image. Describe in 1-3 keywords how your image feels different from the source image. Create a blog post documenting your work.
- Consult resources from syllabus for inspiration. Pixels Week 1 | Pixels Week 2
-
READ AND WATCH:
-
Why isn't the sky blue? and other questions about how we see(?) or construct color.
- Start at 48:00 for "Why isn't the sky blue?" However the entire show is pretty interesting.
-
Computational Color (Don't worry about Rune.js example code.) | Accompanying code examples written in p5.js
- Make your pictures beautiful with a touch of deep learning magic - Mostly look at the pictures in relation to the color pairings in the Computational Color reading.
- Introduction to Neural Networks and Pixel Analysis (20 minutes, but be prepared to spend an hour. Don't try to watch on 2x speed.)
-
Why isn't the sky blue? and other questions about how we see(?) or construct color.