AMS :: Joint Mathematics Meetings, Program by Special Session
Joint Mathematics Meetings Program by Special Session
Current as of Saturday, January 13, 2007 12:54:12
Program |
Deadlines |
Inquiries: meet@ams.org
Joint Mathematics Meetings
New Orleans, LA, January 5-8, 2007 (Friday - Monday)
Meeting #1023
Associate secretaries:
Susan J Friedlander, AMS susan@math.northwestern.edu
James J Tattersall, MAA tat@providence.edu
AMS Special Session on Mathematical Techniques in Musical Analysis
-
Saturday January 6, 2007, 8:00 a.m.-11:55 a.m.
AMS Special Session on Mathematical Techniques in Musical Analysis, I
Organizers:
Robert W. Peck, Louisiana State University rpeck@lsu.edu
Julian Hook, Indiana University-Bloomington
Rachel W. Hall, Saint Joseph's University
-
8:00 a.m.
Introduction to Musical Spaces and Transformations.
Julian Hook*, Indiana University
(1023-00-181)
-
8:30 a.m.
Mathematical Aspects of Pairwise Well-formed Scales.
David Clampitt*, Yale University
(1023-05-516)
-
9:00 a.m.
Musical Intervals and Special Linear Transformations.
Thomas Noll*, Escola Superior de Musica de Catalunya
(1023-11-1349)
-
9:30 a.m.
Elementary Proofs of the Hexachordal Theorem.
Godfried T. Toussaint*, School of Computer Science, McGill University
(1023-00-252)
-
10:00 a.m.
Homometric sets and Z-related chords.
Clifton Callender*, Florida State University
Rachel Hall, St. Joseph's University
(1023-00-1264)
-
10:30 a.m.
Orbifolds and musical scales.
Dmitri Tymoczko*, Princeton University
(1023-51-1118)
-
11:00 a.m.
Voice leading, submajorization, and the distribution constraint.
Rachel Hall*, Saint Joseph's University
Dmitri Tymoczko, Princeton University
(1023-00-1634)
-
11:30 a.m.
Chord Quality and Callender-Quinn-Tymoczko Spaces.
Ian Quinn*, Yale University
(1023-00-1791)
-
Saturday January 6, 2007, 1:00 p.m.-3:55 p.m.
AMS Special Session on Mathematical Techniques in Musical Analysis, II
Organizers:
Robert W. Peck, Louisiana State University rpeck@lsu.edu
Julian Hook, Indiana University-Bloomington
Rachel W. Hall, Saint Joseph's University
-
1:00 p.m.
Yea, Why Try Her Raw Wet Hat?
Robin J Wilson*, The Open University, UK
(1023-00-289)
-
1:30 p.m.
An order 1152 group of triadic transformations and its relevance to music-theoretical structures.
Robert Peck*, Louisiana State University
Jack Douthett, Albuquerque, New Mexico
(1023-20-1231)
-
2:00 p.m.
Consistent Fingerings for a Continuum of Syntonic Tunings.
William A. Sethares*, University of Wisconsin
Andrew Milne, London, UK
Plamondon Jim, Thumbtronics Ltd, Busselton, Western Australia
(1023-51-689)
-
2:30 p.m.
A multi-pronged approach to the creating of an interdisciplinary research program in mathematics and computation in music.
Elaine Chew*, University of Southern California
(1023-00-1757)
-
3:00 p.m.
A Dynamic Programming Approach to the Extraction of Phrase Boundaries from Tempo Variations in Expressive Performances.
Ching-Hua Chuan*, Computer Science, University of Southern California
Elaine Chew, Industrial and Systems Engineering, University of Southern California
(1023-68-1756)
-
3:30 p.m.
Information Theory and Melody: Zero and First Order Markov Models.
Kathryn R Elder*, New York, NY
(1023-62-551)
MAA Online
Inquiries: meet@ams.org