Print Email Facebook Twitter Music, Computing, and Health Title Music, Computing, and Health: A Roadmap for the Current and Future Roles of Music Technology for Health Care and Well-Being Author Agres, Kat R. (National University of Singapore; Institute of High Performance Computing) Schaefer, Rebecca S. (Universiteit Leiden) Volk, Anja (Universiteit Utrecht) van Hooren, Susan (Zuyd University of Applied Science; Open University of the Netherlands) Holzapfel, Andre (KTH Royal Institute of Technology) Dalla Bella, Simone (Biospective Inc) Müller, Meinard (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) de Witte, Martina (Institute of Applied Sciences; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) Neerincx, M.A. (TU Delft Interactive Intelligence) Date 2021 Abstract The fields of music, health, and technology have seen significant interactions in recent years in developing music technology for health care and well-being. In an effort to strengthen the collaboration between the involved disciplines, the workshop “Music, Computing, and Health” was held to discuss best practices and state-of-the-art at the intersection of these areas with researchers from music psychology and neuroscience, music therapy, music information retrieval, music technology, medical technology (medtech), and robotics. Following the discussions at the workshop, this article provides an overview of the different methods of the involved disciplines and their potential contributions to developing music technology for health and well-being. Furthermore, the article summarizes the state of the art in music technology that can be applied in various health scenarios and provides a perspective on challenges and opportunities for developing music technology that (1) supports person-centered care and evidence-based treatments, and (2) contributes to developing standardized, large-scale research on music-based interventions in an interdisciplinary manner. The article provides a resource for those seeking to engage in interdisciplinary research using music-based computational methods to develop technology for health care, and aims to inspire future research directions by evaluating the state of the art with respect to the challenges facing each field. Subject health careinterdisciplinarityMedTechmusic information retrieval (MIR)music neuroscienceMusic psychologymusic technologymusic therapywell-being To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:4fd4b49a-dec8-421f-9c5e-f0785a054e83 DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/2059204321997709 Source Music and Science, 4 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2021 Kat R. Agres, Rebecca S. Schaefer, Anja Volk, Susan van Hooren, Andre Holzapfel, Simone Dalla Bella, Meinard Müller, Martina de Witte, M.A. Neerincx, More Authors Files PDF 2059204321997709.pdf 1.83 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:4fd4b49a-dec8-421f-9c5e-f0785a054e83/datastream/OBJ/view