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职称:Assistant Professor of Performing Arts Technology
所属学校:University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
所属院系:music
所属专业:Music Performance, General
联系方式:734-647-4458
Education B. Mus., McGill University M.A., Ph.D., Stanford University
Michael Gurevich teaches courses in media art, computer-based composition and physical computing, and designs, studies and composes for interactive music systems. Framed through the interdisciplinary lens of Interaction Design, his research explores new aesthetic and interactional possibilities that can emerge in performance with real-time computer systems. Using quantitative, qualitative, ethnographic and practice-based methods, he studies how phenomena such as skill and style appear in digital music performance. Prior to the University of Michigan, Professor Gurevich was a Lecturer at the Sonic Arts Research Centre (SARC) at Queen’s University Belfast, where he co-founded the Performative Interactions research group and co-directed QUBe, an ensemble for experimental and improvised music with acoustic and electronic instruments. He completed a postdoc at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) at Stanford University, and spent 2 years as a research scientist at the Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R), a member of Singapore’s A*STAR family of leading R&D institutions. During his Ph.D. at Stanford he developed the first computational acoustic models of whale and dolphin vocalizations, working with Jonathan Berger and Julius Smith as well as collaborators at the Hopkins Marine Station and Stanford Medical School. Concurrent research with Chris Chafe and Bill Verplank investigated networked music performance and haptic music interfaces, which remain among his areas of interest today. Professor Gurevich is an active author, editor and peer reviewer in the New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME), computer music and human-computer interaction (HCI) communities. He has published in several leading journals and has presented his work at numerous conferences around the world.