Abstract

Music has widespread appeal as a subject for research, drawing on diverse perspectives from a large variety of academic fields. Digital libraries, serving as centres for interdisciplinary exchange [1], enable collaborative interactions with multimodal music resources between users and across use contexts. A thorough understanding of such interactions on a human level, incorporating concerns around user expectations, requirements, and information behaviours is critical in order to evaluate and inform the development of information systems to fulfil this purpose [2]. The proposed half-day workshop on Requirements, Use Cases, and User Studies in Digital Music Libraries and Archives (RUCUS) provides a concerted platform for intellectual exchange between scholars, practitioners, and system developers concerned with user-centric issues of music information research, a topic of primary concern for the development and understanding of Digital Music Libraries and Archives

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