WILLIAM MORRIS HARTMANN (hartmann@pa.msu.edu)
was born in Elgin, Illinois on 28 July 1939, first
son of Walter and Marguerite Hartmann. He was educated at St. John's
Lutheran school in Elgin, River Forest Junior High School in River Forest
Illinois, and at
Oak Park and River Forest High School
(class of 1957).
He studied electrical engineering and physics at
Iowa State University in
Ames, IA, (BSEE 1961). Supported by a Rhodes Scholarship (Iowa and
Lincoln, 1961) he studied theoretical physics with R.J. Elliott at
Oxford University in
England (D.Phil. - condensed matter theory 1965). He continued research
in condensed matter theory as a research assistant (post doc) at
Argonne
National Laboratory in Argonne Illinois (1965-1968).
In 1968 Dr. Hartmann joined the
Department of Physics (now the Department of Physics and Astronomy) at
Michigan State University in East Lansing where he is still employed as
a professor of physics.
His work in condensed
matter theory primarily involved lattice vibrations (phonons)
in defective crystals and the theory of the electron-phonon interaction
in metals and semiconductors.
In 1974 he began teaching an undergraduate course on musical acoustics which
inspired his interest in human hearing. In 1976 he spent a sabbatical year
at Harvard University working with Professor David M. Green
learning psychoacoustics.
He has continued to work in that field, in musical acoustics, and in
signal processing since that time. He has been an adjunct professor in the
MSU Department of Psychology since 1979. His published work in psychoacoustics
deals with pitch perception, signal detection, modulation detection,
and localization of sound. References to this work appear under
various subject headings in the
index .
He has written one book, Signals, Sound, and Sensation
(published by
Springer-Verlag
- AIP Press, 1997). Another book, Principles of Musical Acoustics, is
in preparation.
In 1981-82 Dr. Hartmann took a leave of absence to work as a visiting
scientist at the
Institute for Research on Acoustics and Music (IRCAM)
in Paris. He subsequently served at
IRCAM as acting director of acoustics (1982-1983) and, supported by a
NSF-CNRS grant, as consultant (1983-1987).
Dr. Hartmann has been a fellow of the
Acoustical Society of America since
1983. He was chairman of the
Technical Committee on Musical Acoustics
from 1980 to 1984.
From 1992-1995 he served on the Society's Executive Council and
was chairman of the External Affairs Administrative Council (1994-1995).
He gave the Society Tutorial at the spring meeting in 1996 entitled,
"Pitch, Periodicity and the Brain." He served as vice president
of the Society (1998-1999) and as president (2001-2002). As president,
he worked to enhance the Society's connections with allied organizations
such as the
Institute for Noise Control Engineering
, and to expand the Society's presence internationally.
He is a member of the
American Physical Society , the
Association for Research in
Otolaryngology, the
American Association for the Advancement of Science,
and the Society for Music Perception and Cognition, He was
an associate editor of
Music Perception from 1988-1997.
He is currently the editor-in-chief of the Springer series
Modern Acoustics and Signal Processing.
In 2001 Dr. Hartmann received the
Distinguished Faculty Award from Michigan State University and the
Helmholtz-Rayleigh Silver Medal from the Acoustical Society of America.
Address: 4230 BPS Building, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 48824
Telephone: 517-355-5202.
Research:
Psychoacoustics research
end