101,096 research outputs found
Drum Transcription via Classification of Bar-level Rhythmic Patterns
acceptedMatthias Mauch is supported by a Royal Academy of Engineering
Research Fellowshi
Text-fig. 4. m1 of U. t. mediterraneus from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. All teeth in occlusal view. a: Šandalja I (specimen C), b: U. t. mediterraneus, Mauer (SMNS 10166), c: U. t. mediterraneus, Azykh (ZIN 32549), d: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605), e: U. etruscus, Upper Valdarno (IGF 913), f: U. deningeri, Koněprusy caves (NM-Rv 20008). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; a, d, f reversed. in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 4. m1 of U. t. mediterraneus from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. All teeth in occlusal view. a: Šandalja I (specimen C), b: U. t. mediterraneus, Mauer (SMNS 10166), c: U. t. mediterraneus, Azykh (ZIN 32549), d: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605), e: U. etruscus, Upper Valdarno (IGF 913), f: U. deningeri, Koněprusy caves (NM-Rv 20008). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; a, d, f reversed.Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 537, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt
Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.
Text-fig. 5. Mesial parts of mandibles of U. t. mediterraneus from Mauer (a: SMNS 10166) and Šandalja I (b: specimen F, c: specimen D) showing the arrangement of anterior premolars (p1 – p3). All specimens in dorsal view. in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 5. Mesial parts of mandibles of U. t. mediterraneus from Mauer (a: SMNS 10166) and Šandalja I (b: specimen F, c: specimen D) showing the arrangement of anterior premolars (p1 – p3). All specimens in dorsal view.Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 538, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Computer-aided Melody Note Transcription Using the Tony Software: Accuracy and Efficiency
accepteddate-added: 2015-05-24 19:18:46 +0000 date-modified: 2017-12-28 10:36:36 +0000 keywords: Tony, melody, note, transcription, open source software bdsk-url-1: https://code.soundsoftware.ac.uk/attachments/download/1423/tony-paper_preprint.pdfdate-added: 2015-05-24 19:18:46 +0000 date-modified: 2017-12-28 10:36:36 +0000 keywords: Tony, melody, note, transcription, open source software bdsk-url-1: https://code.soundsoftware.ac.uk/attachments/download/1423/tony-paper_preprint.pdfdate-added: 2015-05-24 19:18:46 +0000 date-modified: 2017-12-28 10:36:36 +0000 keywords: Tony, melody, note, transcription, open source software bdsk-url-1: https://code.soundsoftware.ac.uk/attachments/download/1423/tony-paper_preprint.pdfWe present Tony, a software tool for the interactive an- notation of melodies from monophonic audio recordings, and evaluate its usability and the accuracy of its note extraction method. The scientific study of acoustic performances of melodies, whether sung or played, requires the accurate transcription of notes and pitches. To achieve the desired transcription accuracy for a particular application, researchers manually correct results obtained by automatic methods. Tony is an interactive tool directly aimed at making this correction task efficient. It provides (a) state-of-the art algorithms for pitch and note estimation, (b) visual and auditory feedback for easy error-spotting, (c) an intelligent graphical user interface through which the user can rapidly correct estimation errors, (d) extensive export functions enabling further processing in other applications. We show that Tony’s built in automatic note transcription method compares favourably with existing tools. We report how long it takes to annotate recordings on a set of 96 solo vocal recordings and study the effect of piece, the number of edits made and the annotator’s increasing mastery of the software. Tony is Open Source software, with source code and compiled binaries for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux available from https://code.soundsoftware.ac.uk/projects/tony/
Text-fig. 1. Dental material of ursids from the locality Šandalja I (Croatia) in occlusal view. U. t. mediterraneus – a: m2 dex. (specimen A), b: m2 dex., c: m3 dex. (both specimen B), d: distal fragment of m1 dex. (specimen C); U. deningeri – e: mesial fragment of m2 dex. (specimen G), f: p4 sin. (specimen H). in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 1. Dental material of ursids from the locality Šandalja I (Croatia) in occlusal view. U. t. mediterraneus – a: m2 dex. (specimen A), b: m2 dex., c: m3 dex. (both specimen B), d: distal fragment of m1 dex. (specimen C); U. deningeri – e: mesial fragment of m2 dex. (specimen G), f: p4 sin. (specimen H).Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 535, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Text-fig. 7. p4 of U. deningeri from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. a: Šandalja I (specimen H; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual view), b: U. etruscus, Casa Frata (private collection), c: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605), d: U. deningeri, C 718 cave (NM-Rv 20003), e: U. t. mediterraneus, Azykh cave (ZIN 32549) (all in occlussal view). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; d reversed. in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 7. p4 of U. deningeri from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. a: Šandalja I (specimen H; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual view), b: U. etruscus, Casa Frata (private collection), c: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605), d: U. deningeri, C 718 cave (NM-Rv 20003), e: U. t. mediterraneus, Azykh cave (ZIN 32549) (all in occlussal view). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; d reversed.Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 538, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Text-fig. 2. Mandibular material of ursids from the locality Šandalja I (Croatia). All specimens represent U. t. mediterraneus. a: fragment of right hemimandible (specimen B; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), b: mesial fragment of right hemimandible (specimen D; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), c: mesial fragment of left hemimandible with canine (specimen F; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), d: rostral fragment of mandible (specimen E; dorsal view). in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 2. Mandibular material of ursids from the locality Šandalja I (Croatia). All specimens represent U. t. mediterraneus. a: fragment of right hemimandible (specimen B; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), b: mesial fragment of right hemimandible (specimen D; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), c: mesial fragment of left hemimandible with canine (specimen F; 1 – lingual, 2 – buccal, 3 – dorsal view), d: rostral fragment of mandible (specimen E; dorsal view).Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 536, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Text-fig. 3. m2 and m3 of U. t. mediterraneus from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. a–e: m2, f–g: m3. a: Šandalja I (specimen A; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual, 3 – buccal view), b: Šandalja I (specimen B; occlusal view), c: U. t. mediterraneus, Grotta di Reale (IGF 4807V; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual view), d: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605; occlusal view), e: U. etruscus, Upper Valdarno (IGF 908; occlusal view), f: Šandalja I (specimen B; occlusal view), g: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4588; occlusal view). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; a, b, e, f, g reversed. in Šandalja I (Croatia) And
Text-fig. 3. m2 and m3 of U. t. mediterraneus from Šandalja I compared with other bear species. a–e: m2, f–g: m3. a: Šandalja I (specimen A; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual, 3 – buccal view), b: Šandalja I (specimen B; occlusal view), c: U. t. mediterraneus, Grotta di Reale (IGF 4807V; 1 – occlusal, 2 – lingual view), d: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4605; occlusal view), e: U. etruscus, Upper Valdarno (IGF 908; occlusal view), f: Šandalja I (specimen B; occlusal view), g: U. etruscus, Olivola (IGF 4588; occlusal view). Specimens coated by ammonium chloride; a, b, e, f, g reversed.Published as part of Wagner, Jan, Jiangzuo, Qigao, Lenardić, Jadranka Mauch & Liu, Jinyi, 2017, Šandalja I (Croatia) And, pp. 533-544 in Fossil Imprint 73 (3-4) on page 536, DOI: 10.2478/if-2017-0028, http://zenodo.org/record/538593
Handwritten biographical information on Paulina T. McClung Merritt
A handwritten biography of Paulina T. McClung Merritt by an unknown author, 1892.
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