The claimed systems and methods relate generally to loudspeaker teleconferencing systems that utilize full duplex operation with distant participants, and more particularly to teleconferencing pods that can connect to a telephone device generating an intermittent sidetone that is active at certain times not in the control or monitoring of the pod, wherein the pod includes a sidetone suppressor and compensation function to avoid applying suppression in the absence of an externally-generated sidetone.
The inventions described herein relate to conferencing systems that can connect to a telephonic device in systems such as that depicted in
Telephonic device 104 may produce a sidetone. The term sidetone has several historical meanings, and originates from the early days of radio when Morse code was used. To provide feedback to the radio equipment operator and audible tone was produced in a headset worn by the operator at times when the transmit key was depressed. In devices using an audio signal the term sidetone has come to mean a retransmission of an audio signal received at a local microphone to a local participant, for example through a headset. This is done as feedback to the local participant that his words are being transmitted. Sidetone generation and use can be understood in reference to
Where sound produced by the Speaker 202 is not being carried to microphone 200 it may be desirable to include a sidetone generator 210. The sidetone generator produces an audio signal received at the microphone 200 at a low level, typically less than what listener 204 hears a distant participant, providing feedback to the listener 204 that his speech is being transmitted to the distant parties. That audio signal is fed to a mixer 212 along with the distant audio received at port 208 producing a signal at speaker 202 that includes both the distant audio and a sidetone.
Now referring to
The presence of sidetone generator 210 introduces a problem. The inclusion of sidetone generator 210 in the telephonic equipment may be on an assumption that external equipment connected to ports 214 and 216 is a headset, or rather that a substantial transmission path does not exist between the speaker and microphone at the external device. However, the presence of a conferencing pod does indeed introduce such a path 222. Thus, distant audio produced at Speaker 203 is carried to microphone 201 and transmitted over path 222 through the outgoing connector 260 distant participants. This is perceived by the distant participants as an echo with the delay approximately two times the propagation delay between the local and the distant participants. Additionally, because of the presence of a sidetone generator 210 a feedback loop is introduced in the local equipment. This is experienced by the local participants and the distant participants as ringing and, if the coupling between speaker 203 and microphone 201 is sufficient, howling.
Therefore, the situation presented in
Disclosed herein are teleconferencing pods that include a microphone and a loudspeaker for open-air conversations, connectible to a separate telephonic device that generates an intermittent sidetone that is active at certain times not in the control or monitoring of the pod. In those pods is a sidetone suppressor that suppresses a distracting open-air echo produced from the intermittent sidetone and a compensator that detects sidetone transitions to avoid generating an echo signal in the pod and to avoid adapting suppression in the absence of an externally-generated sidetone. Sidetone suppression may be by several means, and may include variables controlled by adaption, including delay factors, scalers and coefficients. Detailed information on various example embodiments of the inventions are provided in the Detailed Description below, and the inventions are defined by the appended claims.
Reference will now be made in detail to particular implementations of the various inventions described herein in their various aspects, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings and in the detailed description below.
Described herein are certain teleconferencing products for communicating between a local and one or more distant or far-end participants. Those products will typically include an enclosure, one or more microphones for picking up local sound or speech and one or more speakers for generating audio from an audio signal received from the one or more distant conferees. The speakers will be driven by or may be included in a sound producing circuit, for example a power amplifier, and the microphones by a microphone circuit, for example a preamplifier. These devices will include a full-duplex port, which is a transmitter and receiver channel in one bundle, however a full-duplex port can be fashioned from a separate transmitter and receiver channels. The teleconferencing products may or may not utilize frequency decomposition, which is the application of audio data processing in sub-bands. These products need not utilize frequency decomposition, but may rather process wide-band audio data if desired.
It is to be understood that certain substitutions and modifications may be made to the products described herein without departing from the disclosed and/or claimed inventions. For example, in today's signal processing equipment an audio signal may be represented as a stream of audio data, and these are synonymous herein to their respective analog and digital domains. Likewise, where an implementation is described as hardware, it can just as easily be made with software, and vice versa. Exemplary products are presented with certain features, which may contain particular implementations of the inventions described and claimed herein. Where a claimed invention is described with reference to any particular implementation, it is to be understood that this is merely for convenience of description and the inventions so described are not limited to the implementations contained herein.
Some conferencing products may include more than one communication port for communicating participants in more than one location. Others of the products may be connected to an audio signal source at the same time as a connection with a distant participant. A conferencing system utilizing echo cancellation may feed the audio between two distant participants to each other, otherwise they might not hear each other. Certain of conferencing products might be configured or switched such that the audio from one participant is not transmitted to another, thereby permitting a partial private audio line from a distant participant to the local participants. By replacing a connection to a conferee with a connection to an audio source, which could be any source of audio including a playback device or a broadcast receiver, a local participant may listen to that audio source while not transmitting that audio to distant participants. The configuration may be by a physical, logical or a software switch, which can be implemented as a checkbox or other graphical control element. This effect may be one way, meaning that one party is private, or multi-way if it is desired to keep the speech of more than one party private from the others. The effect may be controllable, even during a conference, if it is desired to have a partially private conference for part of the time.
Now continuing the discussion above and referring to
A system described by
Such an event produces the state depicted in
In the ideal case a telephonic device would recognize the device which is connected to it, enabling a sidetone generator when a headset is attached and disabling the generator when a conferencing pod is attached. In the alternative, a conferencing pod could receive a signal from the intermittent sidetone-generating device and the pod could apply sidetone suppression at appropriate times. However, in today's devices no such signals are known; rather the designs of many telephones simply require that a headset and not a conferencing pod be connected. Described herein is a method of detecting a sidetone transition from on to off and, by way of sidetone amplitude detection, from off to on, thereby providing a virtual missing signal of sidetone generation presence to a pod allowing for appropriate sidetone suppression.
Exemplary Conferencing Pods
Two exemplary conferencing pods are now described which may implement intermittent sidetone detection, which take the general architecture shown in
A conferencing pod 302 is provided having a microphone 310 in the speaker 312 transmitting sound to local participants in local vicinity of the conferencing pod. The connection is made to telephonic device 304 by way of an outgoing port 322 and an incoming port 324. In the exemplary conferencing pod 302 and acoustic echo canceler 314 is provided, although it is not required. Acoustic echo canceler 314 applies and echo cancellation signal to the outgoing audio stream by way of mixer 316. Conferencing pod 302 also includes a sidetone suppressor 318 injecting a suppression signal into mixer 320. In this example the sidetone suppressor receives as input signal being delivered to the telephonic device 304 through the output port 322 after any processing performed on the signal received a microphone 310, although a different system might be constructed using an input located elsewhere.
Conferencing pod 302 may include other features and components in many different configurations. For example, microphone 310 may be substituted with a microphone array in a configuration to provide omnidirectivity or noise cancellation. Speaker 312 could be substituted with an array as well. Conferencing pod 302 might be fashioned in any form factors and with controls, displays and other user interactive features. Microphone 310 and speaker 312 could also be substituted for a headset worn on the head or a handset held in the hand.
A first exemplary conferencing pod 400 is shown in
A telephone breakout box 402 connects to pod 400 through a cable 414. Telephone breakout box 402 toggles between pod 400 and a headset connected to box 402, as will shortly be discussed. A headset toggle button 412 performs this toggling function. Now referring to
Using this first configuration, pod 400 may connect to an ordinary telephone 420 with a headset connection, thereby adapting telephone 420 into a conference phone. By pressing headset toggle button 412 a user can switch between conference mode and headset mode, thus preserving the headset function of the telephone 420. The reader will recognize that the concepts presented so far are applicable to this configuration.
In a second configuration shown in
Now turning to
Thus it may be seen from the first exemplary product that a conferencing pod may connect both to a telephonic device and a non-telephonic device. For some non-telephonic devices it may be that a sidetone is not generated, and thus providing sidetone suppression is not appropriate. However, if a sidetone suppressor is adaptive to the conditions experienced it may be that a sidetone suppressor may remain enabled with adequate performance even though a sidetone generator is not present. An optional feature present in conferencing pod 400 is a setting that enables and disables the sidetone suppressor, which feature is settable in the configuration of
The exemplary product of
A second exemplary product, to which the inventions described herein may be applied, is intended as a portable and versatile speakerphone product 500, and is relatively small as can be seen in
One difference between product 500 and other products through which a teleconference might be attempted is that this product is designed to be personally adaptable. Most teleconferencing products are designed with a particular channel in mind, for example an ordinary telephone line or its recent substitute, Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP). Thus, an ordinary teleconferencing product will include a port to interface with a single channel. This product provides an interface to several channel types, by which a user can make a connection to one of several or more channels that happen to be available at the moment.
Referring now to
Alternatively, application software may provide for specific input or output through the product 500. For example, a VOIP soft phone may utilize the product's speaker and microphone, while other applications utilize the general settings for the computer's speakers and microphone, if those are connected. As will be seen, configuring the audio between general audio channels from the speaker phone channels makes possible certain effects.
Continuing to
Now referring to
Cables 515a or 515b could include one or more resistive elements for impedance matching between the speakerphone device and the telephone. If that is done, a cable will become compatible with a set of media devices, but may not function properly in others. For example, it may be desirable to connect a speakerphone device to a music player 520 as in
To achieve improved compatibility with media devices of various kinds, the product 500 is designed to vary its driving and/or gain characteristics on port 514, whereby a single cable 515b may be used for devices having that particular end connector, which in this example is a stereo 2.5 mm male connector. Those port characteristics are programmable through a microcontroller embedded within the product 500. That product is designed to be configured through a USB connection made through port 510. That configuration includes the adjustment of the input and output audio voltage/gain levels, enabling/disabling the mixing of the USB and analog port audio, enabling/disabling line echo cancellation, and disabling the product's speaker 503, some of which features will be further described below. In the product 500 the input and output audio lines are current-limited with in-line resistors, therefore modification of the audio gain levels has the effect of matching the input receiver of a selected media device. In comparable devices, matching may be through gain-adjustable amplifier circuits, current sources or sinks, or any other method. Gain matching may also be adaptable, through the use of an automatic gain control, if desired. An output bandwidth of approximately 150 to 15,000 Hz and an input bandwidth of about 50 to 8,000 Hz provides a good range for playing music and for picking up speech.
The host software of products 400 and 500 include a database of settings suitable for a number of media devices. Selection is made in a screen as shown in
Both of the exemplary products include echo cancellation, such as that described below, auto-leveling of microphone inputs, noise cancellation and full-duplex operation. It is to be understood that the echo cancelling systems and concepts described below are optional and exemplary, and stand separate from the inventions described and claimed herein.
Echo Cancellation
Again, products disclosed above include an echo canceller, which allow for increased audio quality in full-duplex operation by preventing certain echos from reaching a distant party. Some echo cancellers may utilize a finite-impulse response (FIR) filter and others might use an infinite-impulse response (IIR) filter, which filters include a number of coefficients representing the sum of the echo paths in the environment of the product in operation. The echo canceller may produce an echo cancellation signal, which is a continuous signal that is either added to or subtracted from the signal received at the one or more microphones.
For those products implementing an FIR or IIR echo canceller, the coefficients are adapted or converged over a period of time where there is incoming audio from a distant participant but silence in the product's local vicinity. The adaptation of coefficients may be through a converger or adapter that applies an iterative method to arrive at an echo cancelation solution. Coefficient adaptation may be controlled such that those coefficients are adapted generally where there is a substantial far-end audio signal and no detected sound produced in the local environment.
A doubletalk detector may be included to discriminate between a condition of far-end audio only, called far-end singletalk, and a condition of audio on the near and a far-end of the conversation which is called doubletalk. The doubletalk detector may track the conversation between conferees to identify appropriate times to engage coefficient adaptation.
In certain portable products, a speaker and microphone will be present in the same enclosure, and audio will be coupled directly between a speaker and a microphone. Those portable products may be quite small, sometimes small enough to place in a briefcase, purse or pocket.
Device 600 may include an echo controller 616 for reducing acoustic echo. Standard methods of control include operation at half-duplex, and operation at full-duplex with echo cancellation. Half-duplex operation simply cuts off the sound received at microphone 604 when the audible volume at speaker 602 exceeds a pre-selected threshold. Many conferencing products implement half-duplex operation, however that operation carries a disadvantage that participants at only one side of the conference can be heard at any time, and neither side can interrupt or acknowledge the other.
When possible, it is therefore preferable to apply echo cancellation to achieve full-duplex operation. In digital audio systems, echo cancellation can be performed by subtracting off, at controller 616, a modified version of the signal produced at speaker 602, leaving only near-side audio. A conceptual method of cancellation merely applies an attenuation and a delay to the outgoing audio, accounting for the delay and attenuation of feedback path 614. However, in the real world path 614 is complex, including dispersed components from reflections off the several surfaces and persons in proximity to the speaker and microphone.
To deal with that complexity, controller 616 ordinarily implements echo cancellation through use of a finite impulse response (FIR) filter, with the received far-side audio signal as input. The FIR filter utilizes a finite number of coefficients of a length sufficient to cover the longest path 614 of significance expected in operation. The reader should recognize that acoustic echoes will be, in general, of longer duration and greater complexity than line echoes. An acoustic echo canceller therefore requires a much larger number of coefficients to provide echo cancellation, which might cover a number of seconds in a device designed for operation in high-echo rooms (rooms with parallel walls and no carpeting.) These coefficients are applied to a copy of the incoming audio, providing the predicted echo component received at the microphone. The determination of these coefficients is by an iterative method, generally understood by those skilled in the art, and will not be further described here for the sake of brevity. In theory, the FIR coefficients could be determined by the application of a step function to the speaker and a recording of the received audio (in reverse) received at the microphone.
In practice, however, the convergence of the FIR coefficients depends mainly on the presence of an incoming audio signal and the general absence of near-side sound apart from that produced by the device's speaker. This may be performed by measuring the incoming (distant) audio level, the microphone audio level received at the microphone(s), and the audio level following the echo canceller. An indication of good FIR coefficient adaptation is a high volume detected before echo cancellation and a low volume afterward, which can generally only occur if there is significant coupled far-side audio in the absence of near-side audio.
To avoid non-convergence or divergence of the FIR coefficients, the convergence operation should be enabled while there is an incoming far-side signal, with near-side audio at a volume about less than the desired degree of echo cancellation. Operation in the presence of a near-side signal may introduce random errors into the coefficients, while operation with a weak far-side signal can result in a non-converging filter. The second general condition of operation is that convergence should not proceed while there is a substantial near-side signal. Thus, if the FIR coefficients are well-adapted, the system can detect this condition again by periods of high amplitude at the microphone and low amplitude in the echo-cancelled signal. If badly adapted, such a condition will generally not occur, and the levels before and after the echo canceller may track each other or even have a higher after-echo canceller amplitude, in which case the echo canceller is producing echo. Regardless of the state of the echo canceller, the system can detect the presence of near-side audio in the absence of far-side audio, because a high-amplitude signal will be received at the microphone and a low-amplitude signal will be received from the distant conference device. A doubletalk detector may also be used to discriminate other cases where both sides of a conversation may be speaking.
Sidetone Suppressors
The inventions described herein are operable with a sidetone suppressor, which is a component that reduces the volume of a generated sidetone as perceived by a person. Two exemplary sidetone suppressors are shown in
In the first exemplary suppressor of
In this example sidetone suppression is accomplished by an offset buffer of one sample 714, a scaler 715 in the summer 717. Controller 710a controls 722 the offset 713 into buffer 712, thereby presenting an audio sample from input port 700 to scaler 715 at a delay corresponding to the sidetone loop, i.e. the time it takes for a sound received at microphone 702 to appear input 700. Controller 710a takes measures to match the offset 713 with the actual sidetone loop in operation. Controller 710a also controlled scaler 715 to match the attenuation that is provided by the sidetone generator, for which meters 706 and 708 are used.
The example of
A more robust sidetone suppressor can be constructed, as shown in
Controller 710b adapts 726 the coefficients of array 716a to match the sidetone received at port 700. This may be through an iterative method that converges on a solution in a particular time, which time may be selected to be sufficiently short at initialization to rapidly suppress sidetones but long enough to avoid coefficient divergence on spurious events. The inputs to that iterative method may be the samples 725 received at microphone 702, the samples 727 following application of the coefficient array 716 and the resulting sample stream 728 after application of summer 717. Meters 706 and 708 may still be used to measure the effective suppression.
Recognize now that the examples of
Sidetone Transition Detection and Countermeasures
As suggested above, a conferencing product can be adapted to interface with ordinary telephonic equipment, for example functioning as a headset or handset. (Herein, a “set” refers to one or more microphones combined with an earpiece that delivers sound at a relatively low power to a person's ear.) For example, the second exemplary conferencing pod is attachable to a telephone at the headset jack 519, as shown in
A portable conferencing device might be connected to equipment that does not have a sidetone generator with consistent characteristics. For example, a portable conferencing device might be attached to a telephone having more than one line, each line having a separate sidetone generator. Alternatively, a portable conferencing device might be attached to a telephone in a PBX network having many lines and many potential sidetone configurations. In those configurations a user might switch from one line to another and thereby switch between two sidetone generators with different characteristics. Even if a portable conferencing device is not used in equipment having only one line, a sidetone generator may be intermittently present in the case where a telephone has a hold or privacy feature where local sounds are not reproduced. In such equipment, the interruption of sidetone might also be accomplished by disabling the audio output amplifier, or by sending a flat audio signal or a signal other than one containing a sidetone. Under conditions of such a sidetone interruption, an echo canceller can lose adaption to the sidetone, for example where the echo canceller is programmed to decay back to a default state.
Referring again to 2C, consider the following example where a portable conferencing device is connected to telephonic equipment having more than one line and a hold feature. A local participant makes a connection with a distant party and holds a conversation for several minutes, during which sidetone suppressor 218 adapts to the characteristics of the sidetone generator 210. The local participant then decides that he needs to have a private conversation with someone in his office, and places the call on hold.
The local participant now makes a connection with the person in his office, but here there is no sidetone generator present in the system, resulting in the situation shown in
Thus it is now herein recognized that it may be that a sidetone generator is only intermittently present in a system, and might be effectively removed through participant action by a muting function on the telephone without indication to a sidetone suppression system. Again, there are two deleterious effects to continuing operation after withdrawal of a sidetone generator, which are generally effective generation of a false-sidetone by the suppression system and possible mal-adaption. These effects can be avoided if the sidetone suppression system can generate its own indications of sidetone transition events, i.e. the removal or introduction of a sidetone generator. By recognizing sidetone transition events, a conferencing pod may compensate by control logic for an intermittently-present sidetone generator, which control logic in combination with a sidetone suppressor is an intermittent sidetone compensator.
A method of detecting sidetone transitions will now be described, with reference to a system shown in
Further in the system of
Now turning to
The removal of the external sidetone generator leads to the condition shown in
On detecting a sidetone transition event the system may take remedial steps. These include bypassing the sidetone suppressor 912, in this case by switching selection switch 920 to send the signal received at port 904 to speaker 908. Another remedial step is to hold adaption of sidetone suppressor 912, as the adaptive process is now deprived of an input. Thus, the state of suppressor 912 may be maintained in readiness in the event that the sidetone generator should be reconnected. Other steps may be taken on a sidetone transition detection (either on departure of a sidetone generator or a reintroduction), including the resetting of suppressor coefficients and/or increasing the rate of adaption of those coefficients.
Now turning to
It may be recognized that a telephonic system should not be expected to generate a sidetone in the absence a local audio. Therefore, referring out to
Also in the exemplary system, adaption of suppressor 912 is limited to those times when the echo return loss (ERL) is above a certain threshold, which is −18 dB in one exemplary device. In the example of
Now although functions and methods implemented certain exemplary embodiments have been described above, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that these functions and methods may be generalized to like devices and are adaptable to other audio products, including but not limited to conferencing devices, hands-free devices, playback devices, and recording devices. Likewise, although the described functions have been described through the use of block diagrams and in hardware, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that most of the functions described herein may be implemented in software as well. Additionally, the exact configurations described herein need not be adhered to, but rather the diagrams and architectures described herein may be varied according to the skill of one of ordinary skill in the art. Furthermore, the echo cancellation filters described here utilize a finite impulse response filter, however other filters might be used, for example infinite impulse response filters.
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