Elaine Chew


Elaine Chew is an operations researcher and pianist focused on the study of musical structures as they apply to musical performance, composition and cognition, and in the analysis of electrocardiographic traces of arrhythmia. She is currently a senior researcher at the Science et Technologies de la Musique et du Son Laboratory, where she is affiliated with the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, which together with the Institut de Recherche et Coordination Acoustique/Musique, Sorbonne University, and the French Ministry of Culture constitute the joint research laboratory.

Biography

Born in Buffalo, New York, Chew grew up in Singapore, returning to the US after high school for further studies. She received a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences in with honours and Music with distinction from Stanford University. Her in the at MIT was focused on the mathematics of tonality. Chew holds diplomas in piano performance from Trinity College, London.

Career and research

Chew has designed a theory of tonality called the spiral array model. This is a mathematical model using spirals to describe how humans perceive pitches, chords and keys in music.
Chew served as Professor of Digital Media in the School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science at Queen Mary University of London from 2011 to 2019, where she founded the Music, Performance, and Expressivity Laboratory at the Centre for Digital Music. She was an assistant professor at the University of Southern California from 2001 to 2011, where she was the inaugural honouree of the Viterbi Early Career Chair and founded the Music Computation and Cognition Laboratory. At USC, Chew encouraged her students to use technology to explore expressivity in music, and how music is able to both convey emotions and bring out emotional responses in listeners. Chew wrote Mathematical and Computational Modeling of Tonality, a book about her work on mathematical and computational techniques for automated analysis and visualisation of tonal structures, in 2014.
As a concert pianist, Chew plays for audiences while communicating her research, often by showing mathematical visualisations alongside the performances.

Awards and honours