Sonification Design PatternsDr Stephen Barrass Tuesday 1st July 2003 at 11am AbstractSonification is the presentation of data using (non-speech) sound. Most product designers have little or no experience with sonifications. Designers from a range of different domains use a common method called Design Patterns to describe "solutions to problems in context" in a way that can be readily understood and reused. Design Patterns may provide a way to communicate sonification research results with product designers and other design communities. I have written a handful of prototype Sonification Design Patterns from papers in the ICAD 2002 proceedings. The papers I selected had clear statements of hypotheses, results to support them, and repeated examples elsewhere in the proceedings. These Patterns are now on the SonificationDesignPatterns site on the WikiWeb and can be edited and added to using any internet browser. The lively development of SonificationDesignPatterns by the ICAD community may help build sonification-specific vocabulary, identify sonification hypotheses, and allow product designers to pick up and apply our research. This will be followed by a rehearsal for a promotional talk to excite participants at the International Conference in Auditory Display (ICAD) in Boston 2003 to come to ICAD-downunder in Sydney in 2004. Short resumeStephen Barrass is a senior researcher at CSIRO Mathematics and Information Sciences in Canberra. His research interests include virtual environments, human computer interaction, multi-sensory interfaces, sonification, perceptual signal processing, algorithmic music and music visualisation. He gained a Ph.D. in Information Technology from the Australian National University in 1996 with a thesis titled Auditory Information Design. He gained a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering (Hons) from the University of NSW in 1987 with thesis titled Computer Generated Holograms. |