Seminar by Miriam Kolar – Human Centered Archaeoacoustics

Miriam Kolar (Amherst College) will be delivering a presentation on “Human-Centered” Archaeoacoustics: Acoustics and Auditory Science in Archaeometric Research on November 16th, 2021 at 2pm at the Amphi Chappe (CITI Lab, INSA-Lyon).

“Human-Centered” Archaeoacoustics: Acoustics and Auditory Science in Archaeometric Research

Despite over 125 years of modern room acoustics, spatial acoustics has only recently been applied in archaeological research. Likewise, musical instrument acoustics remains a growing but infrequent archaeometric approach. Auditory science is even less frequently incorporated. Since 2008, Miriam Kolar has led archaeoacoustics fieldwork and instrument performance studies at the 3,000-year-old UNESCO World Heritage Centre archaeological complex Chavín de Huántar, Perú, with a second Andean project about sound as an Inca administrative tool. In this presentation, Dr. Kolar will share case-study examples from her work in developing methodologies for “human-centered” archaeometric research, relating acoustics to human experience and social behavior in ancient contexts. Acoustical and psychoacoustical experiments in archaeological settings and with artifact sound-producing instruments enable data-driven reconstructions of heritage sites and instruments in use. Physics-based evaluations of human sensory perspectives support the ecological validity of heritage acoustics, opening a new technological frontier for cultural heritage research, preservation, and knowledge-sharing.

Bio

Miriam A. Kolar, M.F.A., Ph.D., is an Adjunct Professor at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) at Stanford University and a Visiting Professor at Amherst College (USA). She studies human-sonic interrelationships across time and geography, applying acoustical and auditory perceptual science methodologies within an anthropological framework. Principal investigator of the integrative archaeoacoustics project at the 3,000-year-old Andean ceremonial site and UNESCO World Heritage Centre Chavín de Huántar, Peru, Dr. Kolar collaborates on novel applications of digital technologies for cultural heritage research and engagement. Her cultural acoustics research (http://culturalacoustics.org) leverages cross-disciplinary theories and tools to understand sonic experiential aspects of past and present life. In current work, and as co-organizer of the NEH-supported Digital Aural Heritage project (http://auralheritage.org), she explores the potential of auralizations for scholarship and public interfacing. Topics of interest include contextual knowledge representation, information ethics, and ecological validity.

Practical Information

When: Nov. 16th, 2021 – 2pm

Where: Amphi Chappe, 6 Avenue des Arts, 69100 Villeurbanne, France

Additional information: romain.michon[at]inria.fr

This event is FREE and open to the public.

Comments are closed.