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Code and data for our ISMIR2021 paper introducing cosine contours.

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Cosine Contours

This repository contains the data and code for the paper 'Cosine Contours: A Multipurpose Representation for Melodies' to be presented at International Society for Music Information Retrieval conference (ISMIR2021).

📖  Paper (supplements)   •   🎬  Video   •   📜  Poster/slides


Here's a funny observation. Suppose you take a lot of melodies, and measure the pitch height at, say, 50 points in time, equally spaced between the start and end of the melody. All your melodies are now sequences of 50 pitches: a 50 dimensional dataset. The principal components of this dataset will probably look like cosine functions.

In this paper we demonstrate that the principal components of melodies (from motifs and phrases to complete songs) tend to be cosine-shaped. The same is true for artificial random-walk melodies and this suggests that the cosines are a kind of mathematical artefact. The culprit turns out to be the covariance matrix. This roughly approximates a so called Toeplitz matrix, and such matrices (asymptotically) have sinusoidal eigenvectors: our principal components.

Now suppose want to efficiently describe the contour of melodies, capturing as much of the variability in as few dimensions as possible. A principal component projection would be the best choice, but our observations show that we might as well use cosines instead of the principal components, and use a discrete cosine transform. This leads us to propose cosine contours which are simply the discrete cosine transforms of the melodies (pitch sequences). We present three short case studies to illustrate their practical usefulness.

Reference. Bas Cornelissen, Willem Zuidema, and John Ashley Burgoyne, “Cosine Contours: A Multipurpose Representation for Melodies”, in Proc. of the 22st Int. Society for Music Information Retrieval Conf., Online, 2021


Repository structure

  • data/ The data analyzed in the paper: melodic material from various datasets. The melodies are all represented as fixed-length pitch sequences (see paper for details), and stored as csv files.
  • datasets/ Contains the original datasets, which are not included in this repository, but are available online (or just contact us and we can share those). See the Readme for details.
  • notebooks/ Contains the notebooks used in the experiments and to generate all figures.
  • figures/ Contains all figures presented in the paper and supplements.

Python setup

You can find the Python version used in .python-version and all dependencies are listed in requirements.txt. If you use pyenv and venv to manage python versions and virtual environments, do the following:

# Install the right python version
pyenv install | cat .python-version

# Create a virtual environment
python -m venv env

# Activate the environment
source env/bin/activate

# Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt

License

All code is released under an MIT licence. The figures are released under a CC-BY 4.0 license.

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Code and data for our ISMIR2021 paper introducing cosine contours.

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