scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessProceedings Article

Battle of the DJs: an HCI perspective of Traditional, Virtual, Hybrid and Multitouch DJing

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
This work presents a classication of DJ tools, from an interaction point of view, that divides the previous work into Traditional, Virtual and Hybrid setups, and presents a multitouch tabletop application, developed with a group of DJ consultants to ensure an adequate implementation of the traditional gesture lexicon.
Abstract
The DJ culture uses a gesture lexicon strongly rooted in the traditional setup of turntables and a mixer. As novel tools are introduced in the DJ community, this lexicon is adapted to the features they provide. In particular, multitouch technologies can oer a new syntax while still supporting the old lexicon, which is desired by DJs. We present a classication of DJ tools, from an interaction point of view, that divides the previous work into Traditional, Virtual and Hybrid setups. Moreover, we present a multitouch tabletop application, developed with a group of DJ consultants to ensure an adequate implementation of the traditional gesture lexicon. To conclude, we conduct an expert evaluation, with ten DJ users in which we compare the three DJ setups with our prototype. The study revealed that our proposal suits expectations of Club/Radio-DJs, but fails against the mental model of Scratch-DJs, due to the lack of haptic feedback to represent the record’s physical rotation. Furthermore, tests show that our multitouch DJ setup, reduces task duration when compared with Virtual setups.

read more

Citations
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Preemptive Action: Accelerating Human Reaction using Electrical Muscle Stimulation Without Compromising Agency

TL;DR: This work enables preemptive force-feedback systems to speed up human reaction time without fully compromising the user's sense of agency by actuating the user’s body, using EMS, within a particular time window (160 ms after visual stimulus), which was found toSpeed up reaction time by 80 ms in the first study.
Dissertation

Multiparametric interfaces for fine-grained control of digital music

Chris Kiefer
TL;DR: This thesis looks at ways of capturing more detailed and subtle motion for the control of computer music tools; it examines how this motion can be used to control music software, and evaluates musicians’ experience of using these systems.
Dissertation

The design of audio mixing software displays to support critical listening

Josh Mycroft
TL;DR: It is suggested that within the context of a youth-services agency such as this, where children are involved in any kind of crisis, the use of these services is a good idea.
References
More filters
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The reacTable: exploring the synergy between live music performance and tabletop tangible interfaces

TL;DR: The reac Table is presented, a musical instrument based on a tabletop interface that exemplifies several of the reasons for which live music performance and HCI in general, and musical instruments and tabletop interfaces in particular, can lead to a fertile two-way cross-pollination that can equally benefit both fields.
Proceedings Article

Determining the benefits of direct-touch, bimanual, and multifinger input on a multitouch workstation

TL;DR: An empirical user study that considers these three interaction attributes together for a single task, such that it can quantify and compare the performances of each attribute, and concludes with several design guidelines for developing multitouch user interfaces.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Manipulating music: multimodal interaction for DJs

TL;DR: This paper presents an observational study of professional DJ's using D'Groove, and extends the conclusions about the DJ's emerging needs to the broader domain of digital audio manipulation.
Related Papers (5)