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EVOW
2010
Springer

Learning to Dance through Interactive Evolution

13 years 11 months ago
Learning to Dance through Interactive Evolution
A relatively rare application of artificial intelligence at the nexus of art and music is dance. The impulse shared by all humans to express ourselves through dance represents a unique opportunity to artificially capture human creative expression. In particular, the spontaneity and relative ease of moving to the music without any overall plan suggests a natural connection between temporal patterns and motor control. To explore this potential, this paper presents a model called Dance Evolution, which allows the user to train virtual humans to dance to MIDI songs or raw audio, that is, the dancers can dance to any song heard on the radio, including the latest pop music. The dancers are controlled by artificial neural networks (ANNs) that “hear” MIDI sequences or raw audio processed through a discrete Fourier transform-based technique. ANNs learn to dance in new ways through an interactive evolutionary process driven by the user. The main result is that when motion is expressed as ...
Greg A. Dubbin, Kenneth O. Stanley
Added 18 May 2010
Updated 18 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where EVOW
Authors Greg A. Dubbin, Kenneth O. Stanley
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