Algae bloom data, set to music.

NPR has a piece on a USF anthro prof’s idea to make her sort of depressing research more palatable in a way of which this guild heartily approves – by turning data on public reactions to algae blooms (and resulting fish kills and coral death) into music:

The paper, co-authored with three other professors, had to do with the impact of algae blooms and depletion of coral reefs on the region’s tourism industry. The work was glum, says Heather O’Leary. It involved tracking visitors’ reactions to the environment on social media.

“Part of the data for months was just reading tweets: dead fish, dead fish, dead fish,” she recalls. “We were really thinking every day about the Gulf of Mexico and the waters that surround us, especially in St. Pete as a peninsula, about those risks, and the risks to our coastal economy.”

But attending concerts at USF’s School of Music inspired and gladdened her. So she reached out to its director of bands, Matthew McCutchen.

“I’m studying climate change and what’s going down at the coral reefs,” he remembers her saying. “And I’ve got all this data and I’d like to know if there’s any way that we can turn it into music.”

Indeed there was. Composition professor Paul Reller worked with students to map pitch, rhythm and duration to the data. It came alive, O’Leary says, in ways it simply does not on a spreadsheet.

“My students were really excited to start thinking about how the other students, the music students, heard patterns that we did not see in some of the repetitions,” she says. With music, she added, “you can start to sense with different parts of your mind and your body that there are patterns happening and that they’re important.”

In this case, she says, the patterns revealed the economic impact of pollution on coastal Florida communities.

ow, a group of faculty and students are working to bring together music and the environment in related projects, such as an augmented reality experience based on this composition. The group, which calls itself CRESCENDO (Communicating Research Expansively through Sonification and Community-Engaged Neuroaesthetic Data-literacy Opportunities) wants to spread awareness about the algae blooms, data literacy and democratizing science.


You can read (and listen to) more of CRESCENDO’s work here, at USF St. Petersburg’s site.