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About
This library gathers a collection of music signal processing algorithms written by several people. The documentation of each algorithms contains a brief description and references to the corresponding papers.
Credits
Many thanks to everyone who contributed to aubio, including:
- Martin Hermant (MartinHN)
- Eduard Müller (emuell)
- Nils Philippsen (nphilipp)
- Tres Seaver (tseaver)
- Dirkjan Rijnders (dirkjankrijnders)
- Jeffrey Kern (anwserman)
- Sam Alexander (sxalexander)
Special thanks to Juan Pablo Bello, Chris Duxbury, Samer Abdallah, Alain de Cheveigne for their help. Also many thanks to Miguel Ramirez and Nicolas Wack for their advices and help fixing bugs.
Publications
Substantial informations about several of the algorithms and their evaluation are gathered in:
- Paul Brossier, Automatic annotation of musical audio for interactive systems, PhD thesis, Centre for Digital music, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK, 2006.
Additional results obtained with this software were discussed in the following papers:
- P. M. Brossier and J. P. Bello and M. D. Plumbley, Real-time temporal segmentation of note objects in music signals in Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference, 2004, Miami, Florida, ICMA
- P. M. Brossier and J. P. Bello and M. D. Plumbley, Fast labelling of note objects in music signals <https://aubio.org/articles/brossier04fastnotes.pdf>, in Proceedings of the International Symposium on Music Information Retrieval, 2004, Barcelona, Spain
Citation
Please refer to the Zenodo link in the file README.md to cite this release.
Copyright
Copyright © 2003-2017 Paul Brossier <piem@aubio.org>
License
aubio is a free and open source software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Note
aubio is not MIT or BSD licensed. Contact us if you need it in your commercial product.