Sound, made visible
The signal-processing methods I first used on the human brain, turned on music.
In 2017, while working with electrocorticographic (ECoG) data recorded directly from the human brain, I had ideas about applying some of our analysis methods beyond neural data. In my spare time I programmed, in MATLAB, a suite of tools that perform digital signal-processing techniques on audio to output multidimensional representations unlike anything I, or others I know with knowledge of this matter, had seen before.
I'm not presently in a position to divulge the logic of the algorithms behind these atypical processing methods. But I'm happy to create custom visualizations of a song or audio clip, as a digital file or a made-to-order print. To commission one, write to info@recursia.design with the subject "Custom audio visualization request."
If you know this kind of audio visualization and don't think it's novel, I'd genuinely love to hear from you.
Multidimensional spectrograms of classical music
Multidimensional spectrograms of classic rock
Send me the image path and these become the real galleries.