Markov Source Model for Printed Music Decoding
- Gary Kopec ,
- Phil Chou ,
- Dave Maltz
Presented at IS&T/SPIE 1995 Intl. Symposium on Electronic Imaging |
This paper describes a Markov source model for a simple subset of printed music notation. The model is based on the Adobe Sonata music symbol set and a message language of our own design. Chord imaging is the most complex part of the model. Much of the complexity follows from a rule of music typography that requires the noteheads for adjacent pitches to be placed on opposite sides of the chord stem. This rule leads to a proliferation of cases for other typographic details such as dot placement. We will describe the language of message strings accepted by the model and discuss some of the imaging issues associated with various aspects of the message language. We will also point out some aspects of music notation that appear problematic for a finite-state representation. Development of the model was greatly facilitated by the duality between image synthesis and image decoding. Although our ultimate objective was a music image model for use in decoding, most of the development proceeded by using the evolving model for image synthesis, since it is computationally far less costly to image a message than to decode an image.