The Design Research Lab is a network of people, organisations, and non-human agents engaged at the intersection of technologies, materials, and social practices. Our aim is to design socially and ecologically sustainable tools, spaces, and knowledge that support people’s participation in a digital society – based on common principles of inclusiveness and respect for the planet. This puts the basic democratic right to take part in the digital sphere into practice. We start our research from individual lifeworlds and the needs of minoritized groups, beyond consumer majorities.
We are an interdisciplinary team of designers, researchers, tech-enthusiasts and critical thinkers from Berlin University of the Arts, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society, as well as Einsteincenter Digital Future (ECDF).
We are joined in this session by Prof. Dr. Eduardo Miranda for a presentation titled “Quantum Computer Music: A Natural Progression”. AI technology for musical creativity has been evolving in tandem with the development of computers since the 1950s. Emerging quantum computing technologies function at the subatomic level and are subject to the laws of quantum mechanics. Quantum computers will likely impact how music will be composed, performed, and distributed in the time to come. This talk will introduce the field of Quantum Computer Music and show examples of how the author has been using it to create new compositions.
Eduardo Reck Miranda is a composer working at the crossroads of music, science, and new technologies. He pioneered AI for music in the 1990s and has used AI to compose for the BBC Concert Orchestra, BBC Singers, London Sinfonietta and Scottish Chamber Orchestra. He is a Professor of Computer Music at the University of Plymouth, UK, and an associate researcher at Quantinuum, where he is pioneering new approaches to musical composition with quantum computers. His latest books, Handbook of Artificial Intelligence for Music and Quantum Computer Music, are published by Springer Nature.
The Virtual Colloquium this semester is organized in cooperation with Goethe-Institut’s Studio Quantum. The Zoom link to join the Virtual Colloquium will be the same for all sessions: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/82954605489?pwd=VP3XBDzVogeuQtLWaXbWEFpm9ObxiQ.1
Meeting-ID: 829 5460 5489
Kenncode: 079532