A Way of Touching Sound

Date

2013-07

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

DOI

Volume Title

Publisher

British Deaf News

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

No

Abstract

A new way of converting music and sound into something Deaf people can see and touch has been developed by researchers at De Montfort University. They have created a sound sphere – and their physical model of what a piece of music looks like could open a wide variety of commercial uses, including for Deaf people. The surface of the sound sphere is covered in ridges running laterally around it, each representing a set of frequencies within the sound,with the lowest frequency (bass) at the bottom - the ‘south pole’ - and the high frequency (treble) at the top - the ‘north pole’. Together they thought up SoundScapes, the concept of translating sound from sound waves into a solid object.“We had the challenge of having to find a way to break up a sound file into various frequencies, basically high, mid and low tones,” explained Dr Pei.

Description

Keywords

Design Representation, 3D Printing, Additive Manufacturing, Emerging Technologies, Sound, Music Technology

Citation

Pei, E. (2013) A Way of Touching Sound. British Deaf News, July 2013

Rights

Research Institute