Abstract
Welcome to the 11th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR
2010). ISMIR 2010 will be convened in Utrecht, Netherlands, 9-13 August 2010 and is jointly
organised by Utrecht University, the Utrecht School of the Arts, the Meertens Institute and Philips
Research. The organisers have a strong conviction (which we believe is
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widely shared by the MIR
community) that studying the human processing of music is a key issue in innovative MIR research.
Therefore, MIR research and applications that model musical cognition and perception, that
contribute to the human understanding and experience of music, or that make creative use of MIR
research receive particular attention during ISMIR 2010.
ISMIR conferences have a long tradition of high quality interdisciplinary scholarship. We hope that
you will find that these proceedings have met the high standards of excellence reached by previous
ISMIR Program Committees (PC) and participating Music Information Retrieval (MIR) researchers.
Like earlier ISMIRs, the success of ISMIR 2010 is founded upon the hard work of its 24 PC
members, the thoughtful adjudications of its 262 reviewers, and the large number (176) of first-rate
submissions it received from its vibrant research community.
ISMIR 2010 builds upon lessons learned from earlier ISMIR conferences and thus has carried on
many practices from ISMIR’s past. ISMIR 2010 submissions were reviewed double-blind to avoid
bias. Each accepted paper was allotted six pages of proceedings space. As in the past, there was no
quality distinction made concerning the mode of presentation (whether poster or oral). Those papers
chosen for oral presentation were selected solely on the grounds of providing ISMIR 2010
participants with a conference programme that best reflected the wide-ranging interests, techniques
and findings of ISMIR’s multidisciplinary world. Unlike recent ISMIRs, there was no rebuttal phase
because of the shortened review timelines caused by ISMIR 2010’s earlier-than-usual August meeting
date.
New to ISMIR 2010, however, was the creation of a new kind of submission category. This year we
introduced the State-of-the-Art Report (STAR) paper. STAR papers are intended to summarize for the
community the current research questions, accomplishments, and open problems in one of MIR’s
many subfields. STAR papers were allotted up to 12 pages to allow STAR authors to
comprehensively cover their topics. This year, we received seven excellent STAR submissions.
Because of time and space considerations, we were only able to include two STAR papers in the
programne on the topics of Music Emotion Recognition (Kim, et al.) and Audio-Based Music
Structure Analysis (Paulus, Mueller and Klapuri). We hope that ISMIR attendees find this new class
of paper useful and that STAR papers become part of the ISMIR tradition.
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