48,782 research outputs found
Optical Music Recognition with Convolutional Sequence-to-Sequence Models
Optical Music Recognition (OMR) is an important technology within Music
Information Retrieval. Deep learning models show promising results on OMR
tasks, but symbol-level annotated data sets of sufficient size to train such
models are not available and difficult to develop. We present a deep learning
architecture called a Convolutional Sequence-to-Sequence model to both move
towards an end-to-end trainable OMR pipeline, and apply a learning process that
trains on full sentences of sheet music instead of individually labeled
symbols. The model is trained and evaluated on a human generated data set, with
various image augmentations based on real-world scenarios. This data set is the
first publicly available set in OMR research with sufficient size to train and
evaluate deep learning models. With the introduced augmentations a pitch
recognition accuracy of 81% and a duration accuracy of 94% is achieved,
resulting in a note level accuracy of 80%. Finally, the model is compared to
commercially available methods, showing a large improvements over these
applications.Comment: ISMIR 201
End-to-End Cross-Modality Retrieval with CCA Projections and Pairwise Ranking Loss
Cross-modality retrieval encompasses retrieval tasks where the fetched items
are of a different type than the search query, e.g., retrieving pictures
relevant to a given text query. The state-of-the-art approach to cross-modality
retrieval relies on learning a joint embedding space of the two modalities,
where items from either modality are retrieved using nearest-neighbor search.
In this work, we introduce a neural network layer based on Canonical
Correlation Analysis (CCA) that learns better embedding spaces by analytically
computing projections that maximize correlation. In contrast to previous
approaches, the CCA Layer (CCAL) allows us to combine existing objectives for
embedding space learning, such as pairwise ranking losses, with the optimal
projections of CCA. We show the effectiveness of our approach for
cross-modality retrieval on three different scenarios (text-to-image,
audio-sheet-music and zero-shot retrieval), surpassing both Deep CCA and a
multi-view network using freely learned projections optimized by a pairwise
ranking loss, especially when little training data is available (the code for
all three methods is released at: https://github.com/CPJKU/cca_layer).Comment: Preliminary version of a paper published in the International Journal
of Multimedia Information Retrieva
Deep Learning Techniques for Music Generation -- A Survey
This paper is a survey and an analysis of different ways of using deep
learning (deep artificial neural networks) to generate musical content. We
propose a methodology based on five dimensions for our analysis:
Objective - What musical content is to be generated? Examples are: melody,
polyphony, accompaniment or counterpoint. - For what destination and for what
use? To be performed by a human(s) (in the case of a musical score), or by a
machine (in the case of an audio file).
Representation - What are the concepts to be manipulated? Examples are:
waveform, spectrogram, note, chord, meter and beat. - What format is to be
used? Examples are: MIDI, piano roll or text. - How will the representation be
encoded? Examples are: scalar, one-hot or many-hot.
Architecture - What type(s) of deep neural network is (are) to be used?
Examples are: feedforward network, recurrent network, autoencoder or generative
adversarial networks.
Challenge - What are the limitations and open challenges? Examples are:
variability, interactivity and creativity.
Strategy - How do we model and control the process of generation? Examples
are: single-step feedforward, iterative feedforward, sampling or input
manipulation.
For each dimension, we conduct a comparative analysis of various models and
techniques and we propose some tentative multidimensional typology. This
typology is bottom-up, based on the analysis of many existing deep-learning
based systems for music generation selected from the relevant literature. These
systems are described and are used to exemplify the various choices of
objective, representation, architecture, challenge and strategy. The last
section includes some discussion and some prospects.Comment: 209 pages. This paper is a simplified version of the book: J.-P.
Briot, G. Hadjeres and F.-D. Pachet, Deep Learning Techniques for Music
Generation, Computational Synthesis and Creative Systems, Springer, 201
Multimodal music information processing and retrieval: survey and future challenges
Towards improving the performance in various music information processing
tasks, recent studies exploit different modalities able to capture diverse
aspects of music. Such modalities include audio recordings, symbolic music
scores, mid-level representations, motion, and gestural data, video recordings,
editorial or cultural tags, lyrics and album cover arts. This paper critically
reviews the various approaches adopted in Music Information Processing and
Retrieval and highlights how multimodal algorithms can help Music Computing
applications. First, we categorize the related literature based on the
application they address. Subsequently, we analyze existing information fusion
approaches, and we conclude with the set of challenges that Music Information
Retrieval and Sound and Music Computing research communities should focus in
the next years
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