ICSC
interdisciplinary research

Fourth International ICSC Symposium on
ENGINEERING OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS (EIS 2004)
in collaboration with the University of Madeira
Island of Madeira, Portugal
February 29 – March 2, 2004

 
 

 

Session:

Neural Networks and Fuzzy Systems
Tuesday, March 02, 2004, 12.30 – 12.50

Session Chair:

Peter Anderson

   

Paper Title:

Classification of Recorded Classical Music Using Neural Networks

   

Author(s):

Dr R. Malheiro, Catholic University of Portugal, Portugal
R. P.Paiva, Centre for Informatics and Systems of the University of Coimbra A.
J.Mendes, Centre for Informatics and Systems of the University of Coimbra
T. Mendes, Centre for Informatics and Systems of the University of Coimbra
A. Cardoso, Centre for Informatics and Systems of the University of Coimbra

   

Abstract:

As a result of recent technological innovations, there has been a tremendous growth in the Electronic Music Distribution industry. In this way, tasks such us automatic music genre classification address new and exciting research challenges. Automatic music genre recognition involves issues like feature extraction and development of classifiers using the obtained features. As for feature extraction, we use the number of zero crossings, loudness, spectral centroid, bandwidth and uniformity. These features are statistically manipulated, making a total of 40 features. Regarding the task of genre modeling, we train a feedforward neural network (FFNN) with the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm. A taxonomy of subgenres of classical music is used. We consider three classification problems: in the first one, we aim at discriminating between music for flute, piano and violin; in the second problem, we distinguish choral music from opera; finally, in the third one, we aim at discriminating between all the abovementioned five genres together. We obtained 85% classification accuracy in the three-class problem, 90% in the two-class problem and 76% in the five-class problem. These results are encouraging and show that the presented methodology may be a good starting point for addressing more challenging tasks.

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