In this contribution we will show three prototypical applications that allow users to collaboratively create rhythmic structures with successively more degrees of freedom to generate rhythmic complexity. By means of a user study we analyze the impact of this on the users’ satisfaction and further compare it to data logged during the experiments that allow us to measure the rhythmic complexity created.
“TreeQuencer: Collaborative RhythmA Comparative Study Sequencing - A Comparative Study” Authors: Niklas Klügel, Gerhard Hagerer & Georg Groh 14th International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression , NIME’14, 30 June - 4 July 2014 Goldsmiths, University of London Paper
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