Feedback control of acoustic musical instruments: Collocated control using physical analogs
Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However, a modern musician could prefer to have a single musical instrument whose acoustics are programmable by feedback control, where acoustic varia...
Saved in:
Published in | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol. 131; no. 1; pp. 963 - 973 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
01.01.2012
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0001-4966 1520-8524 1520-8524 |
DOI | 10.1121/1.3651091 |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However, a modern musician could prefer to have a single musical instrument whose acoustics are programmable by feedback control, where acoustic variables are estimated from sensor measurements in real time and then fed back in order to influence the controlled variables. In this paper, theory is presented that describes stable feedback control of an acoustic musical instrument. The presentation should be accessible to members of the musical acoustics community who may have limited or no experience with feedback control. First, the only control strategy guaranteed to be stable subject to any musical instrument mobility is described: the sensors and actuators must be collocated, and the controller must emulate a physical analog system. Next, the most fundamental feedback controllers and the corresponding physical analog systems are presented. The effects that these controllers have on acoustic musical instruments are described. Finally, practical design challenges are discussed. A proof explains why changing the resonance frequency of a musical resonance requires much more control power than changing the decay time of the resonance. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However, a modern musician could prefer to have a single musical instrument whose acoustics are programmable by feedback control, where acoustic variables are estimated from sensor measurements in real time and then fed back in order to influence the controlled variables. In this paper, theory is presented that describes stable feedback control of an acoustic musical instrument. The presentation should be accessible to members of the musical acoustics community who may have limited or no experience with feedback control. First, the only control strategy guaranteed to be stable subject to any musical instrument mobility is described: the sensors and actuators must be collocated, and the controller must emulate a physical analog system. Next, the most fundamental feedback controllers and the corresponding physical analog systems are presented. The effects that these controllers have on acoustic musical instruments are described. Finally, practical design challenges are discussed. A proof explains why changing the resonance frequency of a musical resonance requires much more control power than changing the decay time of the resonance. Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However, a modern musician could prefer to have a single musical instrument whose acoustics are programmable by feedback control, where acoustic variables are estimated from sensor measurements in real time and then fed back in order to influence the controlled variables. In this paper, theory is presented that describes stable feedback control of an acoustic musical instrument. The presentation should be accessible to members of the musical acoustics community who may have limited or no experience with feedback control. First, the only control strategy guaranteed to be stable subject to any musical instrument mobility is described: the sensors and actuators must be collocated, and the controller must emulate a physical analog system. Next, the most fundamental feedback controllers and the corresponding physical analog systems are presented. The effects that these controllers have on acoustic musical instruments are described. Finally, practical design challenges are discussed. A proof explains why changing the resonance frequency of a musical resonance requires much more control power than changing the decay time of the resonance.Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However, a modern musician could prefer to have a single musical instrument whose acoustics are programmable by feedback control, where acoustic variables are estimated from sensor measurements in real time and then fed back in order to influence the controlled variables. In this paper, theory is presented that describes stable feedback control of an acoustic musical instrument. The presentation should be accessible to members of the musical acoustics community who may have limited or no experience with feedback control. First, the only control strategy guaranteed to be stable subject to any musical instrument mobility is described: the sensors and actuators must be collocated, and the controller must emulate a physical analog system. Next, the most fundamental feedback controllers and the corresponding physical analog systems are presented. The effects that these controllers have on acoustic musical instruments are described. Finally, practical design challenges are discussed. A proof explains why changing the resonance frequency of a musical resonance requires much more control power than changing the decay time of the resonance. |
Author | Smith, Julius O. Berdahl, Edgar Niemeyer, Günter |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Edgar surname: Berdahl fullname: Berdahl, Edgar – sequence: 2 givenname: Julius O. surname: Smith fullname: Smith, Julius O. – sequence: 3 givenname: Günter surname: Niemeyer fullname: Niemeyer, Günter |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22280719$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNplkDtPwzAUhS1URB8w8AdQNsQQ6kecOGyoooBUiQUmBuvGcUrAsUvsDP33uGrLANPVufrOkc6ZopF1ViN0SfAtIZTMyS3LOcElOUETwilOBafZCE0wxiTNyjwfo6n3n1FywcozNKaUClyQcoLel1rXFaivRDkbemcS1ySg3OBDq5Ju8K0Ck7TWh37otA3-Llk4Y5yCoOtfT8TsOtl8bPc4WDBu7c_RaQPG64vDnaG35cPr4ildvTw-L-5XqWJMhJQryBqONVexBQBusGIqF0VNeFMRAIZFfGasyAssdCOAlnXNGKWs1iWtajZD1_vcTe--B-2D7FqvtDFgdSwiS5pzzArGI3l1IIeq07Xc9G0H_VYe94jAfA-o3nnf60aqNkBodz2hNZJguVtcEnlYPDpu_jiOof_ZH3hkgEU |
CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1121_1_4936901 |
Cites_doi | 10.1121/1.413332 10.1109/TSA.2005.858531 10.1016/j.conengprac.2006.05.014 10.1002/sapm1931101191 10.1080/00207178808906161 10.2514/3.55869 10.1117/12.197321 10.1006/jsvi.1996.0394 |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2012 Acoustical Society of America. |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2012 Acoustical Society of America. |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION NPM 7X8 |
DOI | 10.1121/1.3651091 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | CrossRef MEDLINE - Academic PubMed |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: NPM name: PubMed url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed sourceTypes: Index Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Physics |
EISSN | 1520-8524 |
EndPage | 973 |
ExternalDocumentID | 22280719 10_1121_1_3651091 |
Genre | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | --- --Z -~X .DC 123 29L 4.4 5-Q 5RE 5VS 85S AAAAW AAGWI AAPUP AAYIH AAYXX ABDNZ ABJGX ABJNI ABNAN ABPPZ ABZEH ACBRY ACCUC ACGFO ACGFS ACNCT ADCTM ADMLS AEGXH AEILP AENEX AFFNX AFHCQ AGKCL AGLKD AGMXG AGTJO AGVCI AHSDT AIAGR AIDUJ ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AQWKA BAUXJ CITATION CS3 D0L DU5 EBS EJD F5P H~9 M71 M73 OHT P2P RAZ RIP RNS ROL RQS SC5 SJN TN5 TWZ UHB UPT UQL WH7 XOL XSW YQT ~02 .GJ 186 3O- 41~ 53G 6TJ ABDPE ABEFU ACBNA ACXMS ACYGS ADXHL AETEA AHPGS AI. MVM NEJ NHB NPM VH1 VOH XJT ZCG ZXP ZY4 ~G0 7X8 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c338t-5ca4f50e5c365aa0f0c3c687d15fb1aa308a0f4376708ef8a29dd33223de92bd3 |
ISSN | 0001-4966 1520-8524 |
IngestDate | Fri Sep 05 12:07:49 EDT 2025 Mon Jul 21 05:59:42 EDT 2025 Thu Apr 24 23:10:55 EDT 2025 Tue Jul 01 02:57:04 EDT 2025 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 1 |
Language | English |
License | 2012 Acoustical Society of America. |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c338t-5ca4f50e5c365aa0f0c3c687d15fb1aa308a0f4376708ef8a29dd33223de92bd3 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
PMID | 22280719 |
PQID | 926503735 |
PQPubID | 23479 |
PageCount | 11 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_926503735 pubmed_primary_22280719 crossref_citationtrail_10_1121_1_3651091 crossref_primary_10_1121_1_3651091 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2012-01-01 2012-Jan 20120101 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2012-01-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 01 year: 2012 text: 2012-01-01 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationPlace | United States |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: United States |
PublicationTitle | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America |
PublicationTitleAlternate | J Acoust Soc Am |
PublicationYear | 2012 |
References | (2023072704435965800_c3) 2006; 14 2023072704435965800_c16 (2023072704435965800_c18) 1998 (2023072704435965800_c11) 2005 (2023072704435965800_c1) 2007 2023072704435965800_c10 (2023072704435965800_c25) 2007 (2023072704435965800_c6) 1994; 2351 (2023072704435965800_c23) 2007; 15 (2023072704435965800_c15) 1979; 2 2023072704435965800_c9 2023072704435965800_c7 2023072704435965800_c8 (2023072704435965800_c17) 1995 (2023072704435965800_c2) 2006 (2023072704435965800_c19) 2008 (2023072704435965800_c21) 2010 (2023072704435965800_c28) 1960 (2023072704435965800_c27) 1991 (2023072704435965800_c24) 2008 (2023072704435965800_c12) 1931; 10 (2023072704435965800_c22) 1995; 98 (2023072704435965800_c20) 2008 (2023072704435965800_c13) 1988; 48 (2023072704435965800_c26) 2006 (2023072704435965800_c5) 1982 (2023072704435965800_c14) 1996; 194 (2023072704435965800_c4) 2004 |
References_xml | – ident: 2023072704435965800_c10 – volume: 98 start-page: 2174 issue: 4 year: 1995 ident: 2023072704435965800_c22 article-title: Active control of sound radiation using volume velocity cancellation publication-title: J. Acoust. Soc. Am. doi: 10.1121/1.413332 – volume: 14 start-page: 1817 issue: 5 year: 2006 ident: 2023072704435965800_c3 article-title: Adaptive digital audio effects: A new class of sound transformations publication-title: IEEE Trans. Audio, Speech, Lang. Process. doi: 10.1109/TSA.2005.858531 – start-page: 125 volume-title: Motor Control and Learning: A Behavioral Emphasis year: 1982 ident: 2023072704435965800_c5 – volume: 15 start-page: 163 issue: 2 year: 2007 ident: 2023072704435965800_c23 article-title: General-purpose processors for active vibro-acoustic control: Discussion and experiences publication-title: Control Eng. Pract. doi: 10.1016/j.conengprac.2006.05.014 – ident: 2023072704435965800_c16 – volume-title: Acoustics’08: 155th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 5th FORUM ACUSTICUM, and 9th Congrés Francais d’Acoustique year: 2008 ident: 2023072704435965800_c24 article-title: III, “TFCS: Toolbox for the feedback control of sound – start-page: 533 volume-title: Feedback Control of Dynamic Systems year: 2005 ident: 2023072704435965800_c11 – start-page: 433 volume-title: Proceedings of the International Symposium on Musical Acoustics year: 1995 ident: 2023072704435965800_c17 article-title: Modal stimulation: A sound synthesis new approach – start-page: 124 volume-title: Designing Interactions year: 2007 ident: 2023072704435965800_c1 – ident: 2023072704435965800_c7 – start-page: 62 volume-title: Introduction to Modern Network Synthesis year: 1960 ident: 2023072704435965800_c28 – start-page: 3 volume-title: New Digital Musical Instruments year: 2006 ident: 2023072704435965800_c2 – start-page: 126 volume-title: Applied Nonlinear Control year: 1991 ident: 2023072704435965800_c27 – volume: 10 start-page: 191 year: 1931 ident: 2023072704435965800_c12 article-title: Synthesis of a finite two-terminal network whose driving-point impedance is a prescribed function of frequency publication-title: J. Math. Phys. doi: 10.1002/sapm1931101191 – start-page: 11 volume-title: The Physics of Musical Instruments year: 1998 ident: 2023072704435965800_c18 – start-page: 173 volume-title: Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Digital Audio Effects year: 2008 ident: 2023072704435965800_c19 article-title: Physical parameters of an oscillator changed by active control: Application to a xylophone bar – volume: 48 start-page: 65 issue: 1 year: 1988 ident: 2023072704435965800_c13 article-title: Robust control of dynamically interacting systems publication-title: Int. J. Control doi: 10.1080/00207178808906161 – volume: 2 start-page: 252 year: 1979 ident: 2023072704435965800_c15 article-title: Direct velocity feedback control of large space structures publication-title: J. Guid. Control doi: 10.2514/3.55869 – ident: 2023072704435965800_c9 – volume: 2351 start-page: 282 year: 1994 ident: 2023072704435965800_c6 article-title: Augmented reality: A class of displays on the reality-virtuality continuum publication-title: Proc. SPIE doi: 10.1117/12.197321 – volume: 194 start-page: 765 issue: 5 year: 1996 ident: 2023072704435965800_c14 article-title: Some observations on physical duality and colocation of structural control sensors and actuators publication-title: J. Sound Vib. doi: 10.1006/jsvi.1996.0394 – ident: 2023072704435965800_c8 – volume-title: Physical Audio Signal Processing: For Virtual Musical Instruments and Audio Effects year: 2010 ident: 2023072704435965800_c21 – start-page: 182 volume-title: Psychoacoustics: Facts and Models year: 2006 ident: 2023072704435965800_c26 – start-page: 815 volume-title: Electronic Circuits: Handbook for Design and Application year: 2008 ident: 2023072704435965800_c20 – start-page: 422 volume-title: Proceedings of EuroHaptics year: 2004 ident: 2023072704435965800_c4 article-title: Haptics in computer music: A paradigm shift – volume-title: Introduction to Digital Filters with Audio Applications year: 2007 ident: 2023072704435965800_c25 |
SSID | ssj0005839 |
Score | 2.0906374 |
Snippet | Traditionally, the average professional musician has owned numerous acoustic musical instruments, many of them having distinctive acoustic qualities. However,... |
SourceID | proquest pubmed crossref |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Enrichment Source |
StartPage | 963 |
Title | Feedback control of acoustic musical instruments: Collocated control using physical analogs |
URI | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22280719 https://www.proquest.com/docview/926503735 |
Volume | 131 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Ja9wwFBbphEIvIek6SRNE6aEQnNpavOQ2zUpp2kMTCPRgZEluSzKeITNzaH99nlZPaAJtL57Bkiz8vo_nJ71FCL1l8NXPhMnoqdo0YawhiQC7IUmLolCC8kpYj-nZ5_z0gn285Je9K8Zml8ybPfn73ryS_0EV7gGuJkv2H5CND4Ub8B_whSsgDNe_wvgYPj2NkFcx4Nw49eXEHtC1O144AH7aGrE2k80s_w3wExMGpeKohd0vmAbERGc2dGbLZmufQHYdggpGfh5TTcRHfhqj1jmA4iJf3yjxw-4yH6nvIgYCx_0c6iLrTZb2Yrb7pfeS6LH-5dh0Ynz5Hw66EEfstyhsrEfYotBercIiteQuWzrqXa_-lwnmtGjldN6f2p0Y7Z7t0ZybeqbLfUCA07GFmdgCP14P3y2lHZoeoVUCq4p0gFZHh2efvvYxQWAu-vJTMNf7OJMpGe3H3rVfHliUWOPkfB2teWjwyFFkA63o7il6bKN75ewZ-haIgj3keNLiQBTsiYKXiLKPe5rEMZYmONAEe5o8RxfHR-cHp4k_VSORlJbzhEvBWp5qLuHlhEjbVFKZl4XKeNtkQtC0hJvMVPlJS92WglRKUdD7VOmKNIq-QINu0ulXCHNeUK6ZEvDLiC5LTUGCDJ7Cc2jJh-hdkFUtfcl5c_LJdW2XniSrs9pLeIjexK5TV2flvk44CLwGLWhcW6LTIKy6IqBzKMw5RC8dEPEpAbjNB1u20JOeta_RAGStt8HUnDc7niC3iVd-fg |
linkProvider | EBSCOhost |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Feedback+control+of+acoustic+musical+instruments%3A+collocated+control+using+physical+analogs&rft.jtitle=The+Journal+of+the+Acoustical+Society+of+America&rft.au=Berdahl%2C+Edgar&rft.au=Smith%2C+3rd%2C+Julius+O&rft.au=Niemeyer%2C+G%C3%BCnter&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.eissn=1520-8524&rft.volume=131&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=963&rft_id=info:doi/10.1121%2F1.3651091&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F22280719&rft.externalDocID=22280719 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0001-4966&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0001-4966&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0001-4966&client=summon |