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Microbial Bebop: Creating Music from Complex Dynamics in Microbial Ecology

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  • Peter Larsen
  • Jack Gilbert

Abstract

In order for society to make effective policy decisions on complex and far-reaching subjects, such as appropriate responses to global climate change, scientists must effectively communicate complex results to the non-scientifically specialized public. However, there are few ways however to transform highly complicated scientific data into formats that are engaging to the general community. Taking inspiration from patterns observed in nature and from some of the principles of jazz bebop improvisation, we have generated Microbial Bebop, a method by which microbial environmental data are transformed into music. Microbial Bebop uses meter, pitch, duration, and harmony to highlight the relationships between multiple data types in complex biological datasets. We use a comprehensive microbial ecology, time course dataset collected at the L4 marine monitoring station in the Western English Channel as an example of microbial ecological data that can be transformed into music. Four compositions were generated (www.bio.anl.gov/MicrobialBebop.htm.) from L4 Station data using Microbial Bebop. Each composition, though deriving from the same dataset, is created to highlight different relationships between environmental conditions and microbial community structure. The approach presented here can be applied to a wide variety of complex biological datasets.

Suggested Citation

  • Peter Larsen & Jack Gilbert, 2013. "Microbial Bebop: Creating Music from Complex Dynamics in Microbial Ecology," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(3), pages 1-4, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0058119
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058119
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