E
eltamina
Guest
data sonification helps to make a killing at the stock mark
I am a sound junky. I ran across this guy Jonathan Berger's (not to be confused with Wilhelm Peterson- Berger) website. He is a music associate prof at Stanford, who is into: Sonification of Complex Data (whatever that means)
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/~brg/
<strong>Our aim is to find an auditory representation of multidimensional data that is intuitive, easy to learn, and ammenable to comparing multiple data sets simultaneously. Possible examples include meteorological data (in which temperature, humidity, pressure etc. are changing and interdependent), stock market data (following price and volume of trade of different stocks), or medical data. </strong>
I have no idea what that means, here is the page to the sonification of some stock data:
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/gr...index.html
Select stock from the left hand column. There are samples of Intel stocks etc. I listened to it, I am totally lost.
He is also a composer, here are some audio samples of his compositions:
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/~brg/comp.html
I understand the composition samples better. Anyway bottom line is, is there an opportunity for stock market earnings if we follow this sonification thing.
I am a sound junky. I ran across this guy Jonathan Berger's (not to be confused with Wilhelm Peterson- Berger) website. He is a music associate prof at Stanford, who is into: Sonification of Complex Data (whatever that means)
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/~brg/
<strong>Our aim is to find an auditory representation of multidimensional data that is intuitive, easy to learn, and ammenable to comparing multiple data sets simultaneously. Possible examples include meteorological data (in which temperature, humidity, pressure etc. are changing and interdependent), stock market data (following price and volume of trade of different stocks), or medical data. </strong>
I have no idea what that means, here is the page to the sonification of some stock data:
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/gr...index.html
Select stock from the left hand column. There are samples of Intel stocks etc. I listened to it, I am totally lost.
He is also a composer, here are some audio samples of his compositions:
www-ccrma.stanford.edu/~brg/comp.html
I understand the composition samples better. Anyway bottom line is, is there an opportunity for stock market earnings if we follow this sonification thing.