GP-Music: An Interactive Genetic Programming System for Music Generation with Automated Fitness Raters
Created by W.Langdon from
gp-bibliography.bib Revision:1.9002
- @TechReport{Johanson98,
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author = "Bradley E Johanson and Riccardo Poli",
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title = "{GP-Music}: An Interactive Genetic Programming System
for Music Generation with Automated Fitness Raters",
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institution = "University of Birmingham, School of Computer Science",
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number = "CSRP-98-13",
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month = may,
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year = "1998",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, auto-rater
network layout",
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email = "bjohanso@stanford.edu, R.Poli@cs.bham.ac.uk",
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file = "/1998/CSRP-98-13.ps.gz",
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URL = "
ftp://ftp.cs.bham.ac.uk/pub/tech-reports/1998/CSRP-98-13.ps.gz",
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URL = "
http://graphics.stanford.edu/~bjohanso/gp-music/tech-report",
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size = "12 pages",
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abstract = "we present the GP-Music System, an interactive system
which allows users to evolve short musical sequences
using interactive genetic programming, and its
extensions aimed at making the system fully automated.
The basic GP system works by using a genetic
programming algorithm, a small set of functions for
creating musical sequences, and a user interface which
allows the user to rate individual sequences. With this
user interactive technique it was possible to generate
pleasant tunes over runs of 20 individuals over 10
generations. As the user is the bottleneck in
interactive systems, the system takes rating data from
a users run and uses it to train a neural network based
automatic rater, or auto rater, which can replace the
user in bigger runs. Using this auto rater we were able
to make runs of up to 50 generations with 500
individuals per generation. The best of run pieces
generated by the auto raters were pleasant but were
not, in general, as nice as those generated in user
interactive runs.",
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notes = "See also \cite{johanson:1998:GP-Music}",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Bradley E Johanson
Riccardo Poli
Citations