Florian Grond
Membre régulier
Centre for Sensory Studies, Concordia University
Design and Computation Arts
1515 Ste-Catherine St. W. , QC
, Montreal
(QC)
H3G 1M8
Partager sur
Domaine·s de recherche
- Sonic Interaction Design
- Art and Disability
- Spatial Audio Recording
- Participatory Design
- Media Arts
Université
Concordia University
Axe primaire du Réseau AIRS
Société, politiques et justice environnementale
Axe(s) secondaire(s)
axe1
Secteur·s de recherche
- Société et culture
Type·s de recherche
- Translationnelle
- Recherche-Action
Diplôme·s
- M.Sc
- Ph.D
Travaux de recherche
My research bridges immersive audio, participatory design, and sensory ethnography, with a particular focus on accessibility, disability arts, and inclusive design. As an Assistant Professor in Design and Computation Arts at Concordia University and Co-Director of the Centre for Sensory Studies, I investigate how auditory display, spatial audio,...
My research bridges immersive audio, participatory design, and sensory ethnography, with a particular focus on accessibility, disability arts, and inclusive design. As an Assistant Professor in Design and Computation Arts at Concordia University and Co-Director of the Centre for Sensory Studies, I investigate how auditory display, spatial audio, and sonic interaction can reframe our engagement with environments and with each other. My practice spans experimental sound art to adaptive technologies, emphasizing participatory approaches that center the lived experiences of blind, low-vision, and neurodivergent communities.
A central focus of my work is the development of immersive auditory methods, such as ambisonic recordings, binaural audio, and immersive playback environments that function as “sonic boundary objects” in ethnographic and design research. These approaches enable participants to inhabit, revisit, and reflect on sensory environments together, thereby deepening both experiential understanding and methodological inclusivity. My longstanding collaboration with AIRS member David Howes, as well as my collaboration with Catherine Guastavino’s projects Sound in the City, and Dr. Gregor Kos from Concordia, exemplify this interest in sound as a medium for rethinking environmental presence, justice, and health.
In parallel, I co-lead projects that connect artistic practice with rehabilitation and community health contexts, exploring how immersive listening environments can promote attentional restoration, social connection, and listening equity. My collaboration with Dr. Melissa Park extends this agenda by testing immersive audio as an ethnographic and participatory tool, demonstrating how sonic design can generate new knowledge across health, environment, and culture.
NUMÉRO ORCID :
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9945-8318
Références bibliographiques et DOI
Grond, F., & Devos, P. (2016). Sonic boundary objects: negotiating disability, technology and simulation. Digital Creativity, 27(4), 334–346. https://doi.org/10.1080/14626268.2016.1250012
F. Grond, R. Motta-Ochoa, N. Miyake, T. Tembeck, M. Park and S. Blain-Moraes, "Participatory Design of Affective Technology: Interfacing Biomusic and Autism," in IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 250-261, 1 Jan.-March 2022, https://doi: 10.1109/TAFFC.2019.2922911
Grond, Florian & Kabaciński, Marek & Mróz, Bartłomiej & Ruminski, Andrzej & Żernicki, Tomasz. (2022). The computational complexity of object-based audio (OBA) and volumetric scene-based audio (VSBA). Audio Engineering Society Convention 153 Paper (2022) https://doi.org/10.17743/aesconf.2022.978-1-942220-40-4
F Grond, J Kelly, W Woszczyk. (2022) Spaced AB placements of higher-order Ambisonics microphone arrays: Techniques for recording and balancing direct and ambient sound. Acoustical Science and Technology 43 (2), 131-142 https://doi.org/10.1250/ast.43.131 Acoustical Science and Technology 43 (2), 131-142https://doi.org/10.1250/ast.43.131
Berk Schneider, Florian Grond, Jeanne Côté, Pedram Diba, Min Seok Peter Ko, Sang Song, Tiange Zhou, Shahrokh Yadegari (2022) Musicians Auditory Perception, Listening and empathizing in the creative process. TOR Timbre and Orchestration Writings. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7921688