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14.04.2010 09:32

Plucked from thin air: New musical glove brings a whole new meaning to playing the computer

Friederike Meyer zu Tittingdorf Presse- und Informationszentrum
Universität des Saarlandes

    Nimble fingers glide over invisible strings while the sound of a guitar blasts from the speakers. It might look like just another air guitar routine, but here the sounds really do seem to have been plucked from thin air. The technology behind this astonishing feat is a novel musical glove that transmits signals to a computer when the fingers of the glove are moved. But the glove can do more than just recreate guitar and piano sounds. The sensitive control system could find future use in robots and computer games. Scientists from Saarland University will be showcasing their invention at Hannover Industrial Trade Fair from 19-23 April (Hall 2, Stand C 44).

    The musical glove is fitted with magnetic and acceleration sensors and is able to measure the motion of the hand and the individual fingers. "We don't just record where a particular finger is at any one moment and how it is bent, we can also continuously measure the position of the entire hand", says Esther Tesfagiorgis, part of the team of mechatronics students at Saarland University that developed the musical glove. A computer program then translates the motions of the hand into musical notes. So far the glove has been programmed to simulate guitar and piano sounds. The orientation of the left hand determines which of the instruments is to be simulated. If the left hand moves horizontally, palm downward, the glove simulates a piano, if the left hand is rotated through 180° to leave the palm uppermost, the glove switches into guitar mode.

    "But the sensitivity of the control system means that there are many of other potential applications. For instance, the system could be used to record sign language or to manually control computer games or robots," explains Esther Tesfagiorgis, whose team has filed an application to patent the invention. The sensor-controlled glove could also be used for the kind of delicate hand movements required in surgical operations. The glove is fitted with an acceleration sensor on one side of the hand and with permanent magnets on the palm of the hand that generate a magnetic field. So-called magnetoresistive sensors are located on one side of the first section of each finger. "When the hand moves, the magnetic field changes. This change in the magnetic field is registered by the sensors and transformed into an electric voltage. These voltages are then recorded by a device and processed in the computer as a signal," explains Tesfagiorgis.

    The team of four mechatronic students from Saarbrücken entered their invention for the nationwide Cosima competition (Contest of Students in Microsystem Applications) at last year's Microsystems Technology Congress in Berlin and won first prize. Winning the Cosima contest automatically qualified the group for the international student competition i-Can that was held in January 2010 in Xiamen, China, where competing against 17 other student groups from six countries, the Saarbrücken team once again came out on top.

    Questions can be addressed to:

    Prof. Dr. Hartmut Seidel
    Lehrstuhl für Mikromechanik
    Universität des Saarlandes
    Phone: +49 (0)681 302-4416
    E-mail: seidel@lmm.uni-saarland.de

    Esther Tesfagiorgis
    Tel. +49 (0)511 8949-7101 (during trade fair)

    Note for radio journalists: Studio-quality telephone interviews can be conducted with researchers at Saarland University using ISDN codec technology. Interview requests should be addressed to the university's Press and Public Relations Office (+49 (0)681 302-3610).


    Weitere Informationen:

    http://www.lmm.uni-saarland.de
    http://www.uni-saarland.de/pressefotos


    Bilder

    The students of mechatronics Christian Bur, Eliseo Pignanelli, Esther Tesfagiorgis and Manuel Barra (f.l.) have designed a musical glove.
    The students of mechatronics Christian Bur, Eliseo Pignanelli, Esther Tesfagiorgis and Manuel Barra ...
    Hannibal Hanschke
    None


    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
    Elektrotechnik, Informationstechnik, Musik / Theater, Werkstoffwissenschaften
    überregional
    Forschungs- / Wissenstransfer, Forschungsprojekte
    Englisch


     

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