| Literature DB >> 29138749 |
Felipe Alves Araujo1, Fabricio Lima Brasil2, Allison Candido Lima Santos1, Luzenildo de Sousa Batista Junior1, Savio Pereira Fonseca Dutra1, Carlos Eduardo Coelho Freire Batista1.
Abstract
Deafness, an issue that affects millions of people around the globe, is manifested in different intensities and related to many causes. This impairment negatively affects different aspects of the social life of the deaf people, and music-centered situations (concerts, religious events, etc.) are obviously not inviting for them. The Auris System was conceived to provide the musical experimentation for people who have some type of hearing loss. This system is able to extract musical information from audio and create a representation for music pieces using different stimuli, a new media format to be interpreted by other senses than the hearing. In addition, the system defines a testing methodology based on a noninvasive brain activity recording using an electroencephalographic (EEG) device. The results of the tests are being used to better understand the human musical cognition, in order to improve the accuracy of the Auris musical representation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29138749 PMCID: PMC5613463 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2181380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Schematic overview of the Auris System.
Figure 2Violin notes scale, generated by Sonic Visualiser.
Table of the music and tags used on tests.
| Music type | Artist, title |
|---|---|
| Calm positive | Mike Oldfield, Harmonia Mundi |
| Pink Martini, White Christmas | |
| Energetic positive | George Benson, All Of Me |
| Jennifer Lopez, Let's Get Loud | |
| Dark calm | David Sylvian, Bringing Down The Light |
| Matanza, Clube dos Canalhas | |
| Dark energetic | Celine Dion, Regarde moi |
| Placebo, Meds |
Table of participants information and characteristics of the tests.
| Test | Participant | Type | Age | Used devices | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auris Chair | Auris Bracelet | EEG | ||||
| FUNAD | 1 | Deaf | 15 | X | ||
| 2 | Deaf | 27 | X | |||
| 3 | Deaf | 28 | X | |||
| 4 | Deaf | 31 | X | |||
| 5 | Deaf | 46 | X | |||
| 6 | Deaf | 62 | X | |||
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| UFPB | 2 | Deaf | 27 | X | X | |
| 7 | Deaf | 16 | X | X | ||
| 8 | Deaf | 26 | X | X | ||
| 9 | Deaf | 28 | X | X | X | |
| 10 | Deaf | 29 | X | X | X | |
| 11 | Hearing person | 20 | X | |||
| 12 | Hearing person | 23 | X | |||
| 13 | Hearing person | 23 | X | |||
Figure 3Association between music and video by deaf participants.
Table of musical analysis.
| Music | Tempo (bpm) | Energy | Key result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tchaikovsky, Waltz of the Flowers | 141.88 | 3 | D |
| Eminem, Cleanin' Out My Closet | 147.99 | 4 | Am |
| System Of A Down, B.Y.O.B. | 97.23 | 7 | G#m |
Table of relative topographic distribution of power, from representative deaf (1a and 2a), and hearing participants (1b and 2b) for 12 Hz at channel F3. Each colored line represents the spectrum activity of one single data channel.
| Nr. | a | b |
|---|---|---|
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| 2 |
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