This would be a computer visualization based on the sound of a singers voice that shows them the shape of their vocal tract.
So first you would make a dot that goes up the screen as the pitch of your voice higher and down the screen as the pitch of your voice goes lower, and build it from there.-- JesusHChrist, Feb 22 2013 Some background info http://www.singwise...TractShaping&page=3Actually having read that it would be bloody near impossible to do. [pocmloc, Feb 22 2013] Voiceprints are widely known to exist. http://www.voiceprintsart.com/ [Vernon, Feb 22 2013] So, an oscilloscope.-- tatterdemalion, Feb 22 2013 Is there an oscilloscope software that gives you a realistic visualization of a singers vocal tract as they sing?-- JesusHChrist, Feb 22 2013 | · | | · | | · | | . |
Singing the four first notes of Beethoven's 5th symphony, ascii version-- piluso, Feb 22 2013 sp. | · | | · | | · | | _ |-- pocmloc, Feb 22 2013 I don't see that this would be too hard to do. Basically you do a frequency analysis to ennumerate what harmonics there are and how strong each one is; then you use the output of this to adjust an on-screen image of your throat.-- pocmloc, Feb 22 2013 There are many software applications for pitch detection and most remarkable pitch correction even for live performance. Some open source code uses the [pocmloc] suggested aproach for detection.
What I can't see, is how a singer could use a moving dot in the imprecise scale of a drawing of a vocal tract to improve their tuning.-- piluso, Feb 22 2013 Well I was imagining that the well-baked spectrum analysis side of things would outoput a series of numbers (basically pairs of {frequency, amplitude}). The clever bit is that there is an algorythym that draws on the screen a lifelike 3d representation of the inside of a human vocal tract. When you feed into the algowrithem a series of number-pairs, it redraws the picture distorted in certain directions. The clever bit is that the distortions are calculated to approximate the real-world shape of the singer's bodily parts.-- pocmloc, Feb 22 2013 // Is there an oscilloscope software that gives you a realistic visualization of a singers vocal tract as they sing? //
Yes. It's called 'Rock Band' for Xbox 360.-- Alterother, Feb 22 2013 random, halfbakery