Seeing Sound

Seeing Sound
Title Seeing Sound PDF eBook
Author Winston E. Kock
Publisher
Pages 116
Release 1971
Genre Science
ISBN

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Seeing Sound

Seeing Sound
Title Seeing Sound PDF eBook
Author Winston E. Kock
Publisher
Pages 120
Release 1971
Genre Science
ISBN

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Audio-vision

Audio-vision
Title Audio-vision PDF eBook
Author Michel Chion
Publisher Columbia University Press
Pages 282
Release 1994
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780231078993

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Deals with issue of sound in audio-visual images

The Sound Book: The Science of the Sonic Wonders of the World

The Sound Book: The Science of the Sonic Wonders of the World
Title The Sound Book: The Science of the Sonic Wonders of the World PDF eBook
Author Trevor Cox
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
Pages 391
Release 2014-02-10
Genre Science
ISBN 039324282X

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"A lucid and passionate case for a more mindful way of listening to and engaging with musical, natural, and manmade sounds." —New York Times In this tour of the world’s most unexpected sounds, Trevor Cox—the “David Attenborough of the acoustic realm” (Observer)—discovers the world’s longest echo in a hidden oil cavern in Scotland, unlocks the secret of singing sand dunes in California, and alerts us to the aural gems that exist everywhere in between. Using the world’s most amazing acoustic phenomena to reveal how sound works in everyday life, The Sound Book inspires us to become better listeners in a world dominated by the visual and to open our ears to the glorious cacophony all around us.

Auditory Neuroscience

Auditory Neuroscience
Title Auditory Neuroscience PDF eBook
Author Jan Schnupp
Publisher MIT Press
Pages 367
Release 2012-08-17
Genre Medical
ISBN 0262518023

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An integrated overview of hearing and the interplay of physical, biological, and psychological processes underlying it. Every time we listen—to speech, to music, to footsteps approaching or retreating—our auditory perception is the result of a long chain of diverse and intricate processes that unfold within the source of the sound itself, in the air, in our ears, and, most of all, in our brains. Hearing is an "everyday miracle" that, despite its staggering complexity, seems effortless. This book offers an integrated account of hearing in terms of the neural processes that take place in different parts of the auditory system. Because hearing results from the interplay of so many physical, biological, and psychological processes, the book pulls together the different aspects of hearing—including acoustics, the mathematics of signal processing, the physiology of the ear and central auditory pathways, psychoacoustics, speech, and music—into a coherent whole.

Learn to Read by Seeing Sound

Learn to Read by Seeing Sound
Title Learn to Read by Seeing Sound PDF eBook
Author Thomas Chandler
Publisher
Pages
Release 1958
Genre Readers (Primary)
ISBN

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The Sound I Saw

The Sound I Saw
Title The Sound I Saw PDF eBook
Author Roy Decarava
Publisher Phaidon Press
Pages 200
Release 2001-09-13
Genre Photography
ISBN 9780714841236

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This is the long-awaited publication of a moving masterwork by one of the greatest photographers of our time. Conceived, designed, written and made by hand as a prototype by master photographer Roy DeCarava (b.1919) in the early 1960s, yet unpublished for nearly half a century, The Sound I Saw has largely existed as a legend among the cognoscenti of the photography world. Presented as a stream of 196 soulful images interspersed with DeCarava's own evocative poetry, the book is, in its form and effect, the printed equivalent of jazz. "This is a book about people, about jazz, and about things. The work between its covers tries to present images for the head and for the heart and, like its subject matter, is particular, subjective, and individual," writes the author. DeCarava is a life-long New Yorker who from his immediate world creates images that transcend the specific to depict universal themes of joy, anticipation, pain and survival. Largely unpublished, he was first recognized for his images of daily life in Harlem (the subject of The Sweet Flypaper of Life, his 1955 collaboration with Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes) and portraits of musicians like Duke Ellington and Billie Holiday. It is these two themes, Harlem and jazz, interwoven and inseparable, that are the ostensible subject of the book. However, the seemingly casual yet deeply felt compositions and the deep, rich tones of DeCarava's photographs stir emotions that resonate far beyond one neighbourhood and one era.