The present invention relates to a method and/or architecture for adaptive noise cancellation (ANC) generally and, more particularly, to an adaptive noise cancellation system that may be used with digital versatile disk (DVD) systems.
Conventional DVD players do not support adaptive noise cancellation technology. Noise cancellation can be incorporated into microphones, but at a cost that may be prohibitive for consumer products, such as karaoke players. Players used for karaoke have noise that is inputted to the microphone and propagated to the speakers. Furthermore, there is no anti-noise support for the speakers.
The present invention concerns an apparatus comprising an input, a noise cancellation circuit, an audio circuit and a mixing circuit. The input may be configured to receive one or more input signals. The noise cancellation circuit may be configured to generate a first processed audio signal having reduced noise in response to the input signals. The audio circuit may be configured to generate a second audio signal from a digital source. The mixing circuit may mix the processed audio signal and the second audio signals to generate an output signal.
The objects, features and advantages of the present invention include providing a method and/or architecture for ANC in digital versatile disk (DVD) systems that may provide (i) a variety of features such as noise detect, noise suppress and anti-noise that may each be optionally enabled at different programmable dB levels; (ii) dynamic anti-noise processing such that delay from sound input to sound processed for anti-noise output is synchronized even with lengthy intermediate audio processing involved such as 3D Audio or Karaoke; (iii) enhanced ANC functions such as programmable detect, suppress and anti-noise and/or (iv) a single DVD system to handle all room, DVD playback, browser playback, and browser capture processing.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description and the appended claims and drawings in which:
Referring to
The circuit 100 may be implemented as an adaptive noise cancellation (ANC) system. For example, the circuit 100 may be implemented within consumer DVD players. The circuit 100 may enable stationary noise detect, then implement optional noise suppress, karaoke processing, anti-noise, or other appropriate type audio processing. The circuit 100 may also provide sound detect and reporting features for DVD players, dynamic anti-noise processing for introduced delay and band programmable based stationary noise detect, suppress and anti-noise. The system 100 may also provide remote noise detect, suppress and anti-noise processing. Additionally, the circuit 100 may be implemented as an ANC system for browser functions.
Referring to
The circuit 104 generally comprises a circuit 130, a circuit 132, a circuit 134, a circuit 136, a circuit 138, a circuit 140, a circuit 142, a circuit 144, a circuit 146, a circuit 148, and a circuit 150. The circuit 130 may be implemented as a register. The circuit 132 may be implemented as a karaoke processor or other sound detect processor. The circuit 134 may be a stationary noise suppress circuit. The circuit 136 may be a record sound sample circuit. The circuit 138 may be a mixing circuit. The circuit 140 may be a delay circuit. The circuit 142 may be an analog-to-digital audio converter circuit. The circuit 144 may be a stationary noise detect circuit. The circuit 146 may be used to invert the amplitude phase of the noise. The circuit 148 may be a multiplexor or other appropriate logic. The circuit 150 may be a mixing circuit.
The circuit 100 may provide an ANC system for DVD players. While two microphone inputs 110a–110b are shown, one or more microphone inputs may be implemented. Each microphone input 110a–10b may have a corresponding analog-to-digital convert 120, 122, etc. The outputs of the ADCs 120 and 122 may be mixed (by the mixing circuit 124) to provide a single feed (the signal MIX) to the processing circuit 104. The digital feed MIX may be presented to a DVD silicon IC (e.g., the processing circuit 104). The processing circuit 104 may optionally include a CPU or an A/V decoder (both of which are not shown) which may control the various circuits 130–150. Additionally, the processing circuit 104 may implement an embedded postal DSP circuit (not shown) to allow the ANC and sound sample process in DSP code. The circuit 100 may also implement software that may eliminate background noise from speech and other signals. For example, the ANC firmware may implement Clearspeech® by Network Connections Technologies, Inc.
The circuit 100 of
Local memory and firmware may record sound samples and perform sound detect and reporting. Typical sounds to detect are phone ring, door bell, leaf blower, dog bark, lawn mower, frogs, crickets, radio in the room, speaker phone in the room, etc. To reduce such sounds in recording, the user may provide a sample sound to the system. When enabled, the system 100 may search for the background sounds and report detection.
Additionally, other local memory and firmware may detect frequency overlapping of HomeRF and IEEE 802.11 and provide anti-band strength of the one the user chooses. The system 100 enables browser audio, such as VoIP or Internet radio to have ANC, with Karaoke and sound detect options as well.
Referring to
Referring to
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The APCM memory circuit 302 may present a signal to the ADPCM decode circuit 304. The ADPCM decode circuit 304 may then present a signal to the comparator 310. The incoming detect and suppress circuit 306 may receive the signal RE and the signal SUP. The circuit 306 may then present a signal to the register 308. The register 308 may then present a signal to the comparator 310. When a match occurs within the comparator 310, the sound detect circuit 300 may notify the circuit 100 of a sound sample to be filtered.
Alternatively, user sound samples may be inputted and audio may be cleansed and stored on a DVD system. The stored sounds may then be used to identify incoming audio and process the audio according to pre-determined programmable parameters. The circuit 100 may provide adaptive noise cancellation (ANC) technology in DVD players.
For the Karaoke market, microphone input processing features of ANC enable clear recording and speaker output with anti-noise to eliminate room noise for listeners. However, many additional markets may benefit from noise detection, suppression and anti-noise to eliminate room noise for the listener. The circuit 100 may notify the user of noise through an audio and/or video interface. Furthermore, the user may be selectively notified of recorded sounds.
The circuit 100 may support ANC functions on a DVD system, such as noise detect, noise suppress and anti-noise. Each optionally enabled and at different programmable dB levels. The circuit 100 may allow ANC functions to be supported on a DVD system with karaoke, where typical karaoke functions such as key control, voice cancellation, and surround are supported with measured amounts of stationary noise mixed from the microphone inputs. Optionally, the circuitry 100 may implement microphone input noise detect and suppress. The circuit 100 may allow ANC functions to be supported on a DVD system where the DVD bitstream feed may have ANC operations done, such as noise detect, noise suppress and anti-noise, each optionally enabled and at different programmable decibel levels. The circuit 100 may allow ANC functions to be supported on DVD systems that perform stationary noise detect and suppress, enabling cleanly recorded sound samples to be used for sound detect.
The circuit 100 may allow dynamic anti-noise processing such that delay from sound input to sound processed for anti-noise output is synchronized even with lengthy intermediate audio processing involved such as 3D Audio or Karaoke. However, synchronization may have an increased new fixed latency based on the newly introduced delay via the circuit 100. The circuit 100 may allow enhanced ANC functions to be supported on a DVD system, such as programmable type of detect, suppress and anti-noise. Programmability may be on an audio band basis, such as shown in
The circuit 100 may allow mixing of audio that has had noise detect and suppress with other audio, such as from a DVD playback, then having anti-noise mixed. The circuit 100 may enable a single DVD system to handle all room, DVD playback, browser playback, and browser capture processing. The circuit 100 may allow ANC and sound detect and noise suppress functions to be supported on a DVD system for browser VoIP, Internet audio and other browser based audio. For example, real audio playback of a radio station may have noise that can be detected and suppressed for better listening. The circuit 100 may allow a user to record sound samples and input audio and monitored for the sounds. When the sound are detected, the user may be notified via audio or video. The circuit 100 may allow programmable types of sound detect notification, such as change in audio output (e.g., mute all sound except for detected sound, or optionally amplify sound) or change in video output (e.g., blinking object on the display, text on the display with option to name the detected sound), change in A/V programming or change in audio and video output.
The circuit 100 may allow user notification of a VoIP call from browser and the ANC may be engaged automatically. The circuit 100 may allow remote noise detect, suppress and anti-noise as well as sound detect to be enabled. For example, the browser may have a server role, where a remote web access may implement an ANC and sound detect technology enabled DVD player to assess the sounds of the rooms, even record the sounds (or just log with time and sound detected) for review at a later time. The circuit 100 may allow a DVD player with ANC architecture to (i) allow a microphone input to be multiplexed with a DVD bitstream input to feed a stationary noise detect function, (ii) provide a stationary noise suppress function, and (iii) provide a sound detect function. The feed audio and recorded sound samples may then be compared and an anti-noise function and mixed on the output such that A/V synchronization is maintained.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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