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Apologies, a couple of mistakes in the previous email. It is on Tuesday and will be Laurent this time, not Guillaume. Take two:

Dear all,

Next Tuesday 2 June, at 3pm, Laurent Daudet will present the seminar Less is more: sparse representations for audio.

The seminar will take place in room 105 in the Electronic Engineering Department, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS. Directions of how to get to Queen Mary are available at http://www.elec.qmul.ac.uk/research/seminars/ as are details of future seminars. The room is under access control, so people from outside QM will need to contact C4DM to get in - the lab phone number is +44 (0)20 7882 5528 and if I'm not available, anyone else in the lab should be able to help. If you are coming from outside Queen Mary, please let me know, so I can make sure no-one's stuck outside the doors.

All are welcome to attend. For those unable to attend a video recording of the seminar should be available on the above website after a few days.

If you wish to be added to / removed from our mailing list, please send me an email and I'll be happy to do so.


Tuesday's seminar (2 June 3pm):

Title:
Less is more: sparse representations for audio

Speaker:
Laurent Daudet
Musical Acoustics Group, D'Alembert Institute for Mechanical Engineering, University Pierre-and-Marie-Curie - Paris 6


Abstract:
This talk will be focused on signal modeling using sparse decompositions in overcomplete dictionaries, with a strong focus on audio signals. In such models, a signal is approximated by combining a small number of elementary waveforms ("atoms"), taken from a very large collection ("dictionary"). This provides extra flexibility (e.g. apparently avoids time-frequency resolution constraints) but comes with increased complexity over standard Fourier-based analysis. Greedy techniques have however been developed that provide near-optimal decompositions in reasonable computational cost, i.e. applicable on large-scale multimedia databases. After a general overview, I will discuss recent applications that takes advantage of sparsity, combining scalable audio coding with Music Information Retrieval applications.


Bio:
Laurent Daudet is Associate Professor at the Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University (UPMC aka Paris 6), France. He's also Visiting Senior Lecturer at Queen Mary University of London. After a physics education at the Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France, he received a Ph.D. degree in applied mathematics from the Universite de Provence, Marseille, France, in 2000. In 2001 and 2002, he was an EU Marie Curie Post-doctoral Fellow with Prof Mark Sandler at the Centre for Digital Music at Queen Mary University of London. Since 2002, he has been working at UPMC where he joined the Musical Acoustics Laboratory (LAM), now part of the D'Alembert Institute for mechanical engineering. He is author or coauthor of over 70 publications on various aspects of digital audio signal processing. His research focuses mainly on applications of sparse signal processing for the analysis and synthesis of audio signals. 



Tim Murray Browne

--
Centre for Digital Music (C4DM)
Electronic Engineering Department
Queen Mary, University of London
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Tel: +44 (0)20 7882 5528
Fax: +44 (0)20 7882 7997

C4DM Web-site : http://www.elec.qmul.ac.uk/digitalmusic/index.html