Drummers rejoice: There’s now a robot arm for three-handed drumming
Neil Peart might soon be out of a job.
he arm, which is strapped onto a drummer’s shoulder, can keep time with what he’s playing and add a beat to the song. So if the drummer is hitting the high-hat cymbal, the arm will know to move to keep time on the ride cymbal, and when the human moves to the snare drum, the arm moves to the tom drum.
“We
believe that if you have something that is part of your body, it’s a
completely different feeling, because it learns how your body moves and
it can augment it,” Weinberg said in a video released by the university.
“So if you want to move toward a particular drum, the arm knows that
because it recognizes your gestures and you feel that your own body is
responding to you in a way.”
The two-foot arm uses onboard accelerometers to
measure distance and proximity to the drum kit, and according to a
release from the university, was programmed using motion-capture images
of a human drumming, helping it to imitate the natural movements of a
human arm. The university said in a blog post
that the next step is to connect the arm to a human’s brain activity,
so instead of inferring what the human is playing, the drummer would
actually be able to control it as they would their own arm.Read the full article at its source: http://qz.com/619823/drummers-rejoice-theres-now-a-robot-arm-for-three-handed-drumming/
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