The present invention relates to synthesizing a rendered output signal such as a stereo output signal or an output signal having more audio channel signals based on an available multichannel downmix and additional control data. Specifically, the multichannel downmix is a downmix of a plurality of audio object signals.
Recent development in audio facilitates the recreation of a multichannel representation of an audio signal based on a stereo (or mono) signal and corresponding control data. These parametric surround coding methods usually comprise a parameterisation. A parametric multichannel audio decoder, (e.g. the MPEG Surround decoder defined in ISO/IEC 23003-1 [1], [2]), reconstructs M channels based on K transmitted channels, where M>K, by use of the additional control data. The control data consists of a parameterisation of the multichannel signal based on IID (Inter-channel Intensity Difference) and ICC (Inter-Channel Coherence). These parameters are normally extracted in the encoding stage and describe power ratio and correlation between channel pairs used in the up-mix process. Using such a coding scheme allows for coding at a significantly significant lower data rate than transmitting all the M channels, making the coding very efficient while at the same time ensuring compatibility with both K channel devices and M channel devices.
A much related coding system is the corresponding audio object coder [3], [4] where several audio objects are down-mixed at the encoder and later upmixed, guided by control data. The process of upmixing can also be seen as a separation of the objects that are mixed in the downmix. The resulting upmixed signal can be rendered into one or more playback channels. More precisely, [3, 4] present a method to synthesize audio channels from a downmix (referred to as sum signal), statistical information about the source objects, and data that describes the desired output format. In case several downmix signals are used, these downmix signals consist of different subsets of the objects, and the upmixing is performed for each downmix channel individually.
In the case of a stereo object downmix and object rendering to stereo, or generation of a stereo signal suitable for further processing by for instance an MPEG surround decoder, it is known that a significant performance advantage is achieved by joint processing of the two channels with a time and frequency dependent matrixing scheme. Outside the scope of audio object coding, a related technique is applied for partially transforming one stereo audio signal into another stereo audio signal in WO2006/103584. It is also well known that for a general audio object coding system it is necessitated to introduce the addition of a decorrelation process to the rendering in order to perceptually reproduce the desired reference scene. However, a description of a jointly optimized combination of matrixing and decorrelation is not known. A simple combination of the conventional methods leads either to inefficient and inflexible use of the capabilities offered by a multichannel object downmix or to a poor stereo image quality in the resulting object decoder renderings.
According to an embodiment, an apparatus for synthesising an output signal having a first audio channel signal and a second audio channel signal may have; a decorrelator stage for generating a decorrelated signal having a decorrelated single channel signal or a decorrelated first channel signal and a decorrelated second channel signal from a downmix signal, the downmix signal having a first audio object downmix signal and a second audio object downmix signal, the downmix signal representing a downmix of a plurality of audio object signals in accordance with downmix information; and a combiner for performing a weighted combination of the downmix signal and the decorrelated signal using weighting factors, wherein the combiner is operative to calculate the weighting factors for the weighted combination from the downmix information, from target rendering information indicating virtual positions of the audio objects in a virtual replay set-up, and parametric audio object information describing the audio objects.
According to another embodiment, a method of synthesising an output signal having a first audio channel signal and a second audio channel signal may have the steps of: generating a decorrelated signal having a decorrelated single channel signal or a decorrelated first channel signal and a decorrelated second channel signal from a downmix signal, the downmix signal having a first audio object downmix signal and a second audio object downmix signal, the downmix signal representing a downmix of a plurality of audio object signals in accordance with downmix information; and performing a weighted combination of the downmix signal and the decorrelated signal using weighting factors, based on a calculation of the weighting factors for the weighted combination from the downmix information, from target rendering information indicating virtual positions of the audio objects in a virtual replay set-up, and parametric audio object information describing the audio objects.
Another embodiment may have a computer program having a program code adapted for performing the inventive method, when running on a processor.
The present invention provides a synthesis of a rendered output signal having two (stereo) audio channel signals or more than two audio channel signals. In case of many audio objects, a number of synthesized audio channel signals is, however, smaller than the number of original audio objects. However, when the number of audio objects is small (e.g. 2) or the number of output channels is 2, 3 or even larger, the number of audio output channels can be greater than the number of objects. The synthesis of the rendered output signal is done without a complete audio object decoding operation into decoded audio objects and a subsequent target rendering of the synthesized audio objects. Instead, a calculation of the rendered output signals is done in the parameter domain based on downmix information, on target rendering information and on audio object information describing the audio objects such as energy information and correlation information. Thus, the number of decorrelators which heavily contribute to the implementation complexity of a synthesizing apparatus can be reduced to be smaller than the number of output channels and even substantially smaller than the number of audio objects. Specifically, synthesizers with only a single decorrelator or two decorrelators can be implemented for high quality audio synthesis. Furthermore, due to the fact that a complete audio object decoding and subsequent target rendering is not to be conducted, memory and computational resources can be saved. Furthermore, each operation introduces potential artifacts. Therefore, the calculation in accordance with the present invention is advantageously done in the parameter domain only so that the only audio signals which are not given in parameters but which are given as, for example, time domain or subband domain signals are the at least two object down-mix signals. During the audio synthesis, they are introduced into the decorrelator either in a downmixed form when a single decorrelator is used or in a mixed form, when a decorrelator for each channel is used. Other operations done on the time domain or filter bank domain or mixed channel signals are only weighted combinations such as weighted additions or weighted subtractions, i.e., linear operations. Thus, the introduction of artifacts due to a complete audio object decoding operation and a subsequent target rendering operation are avoided.
The audio object information is given as an energy information and correlation information, for example in the form of an object covariance matrix. Furthermore, it is advantageous that such a matrix is available for each subband and each time block so that a frequency-time map exists, where each map entry includes an audio object covariance matrix describing the energy of the respective audio objects in this subband and the correlation between respective pairs of audio objects in the corresponding subband. Naturally, this information is related to a certain time block or time frame or time portion of a subband signal or an audio signal.
The audio synthesis is performed into a rendered stereo output signal having a first or left audio channel signal and a second or right audio channel signal. Thus, one can approach an application of audio object coding, in which the rendering of the objects to stereo is as close as possible to the reference stereo rendering.
In many applications of audio object coding it is of great importance that the rendering of the objects to stereo is as close as possible to the reference stereo rendering. Achieving a high quality of the stereo rendering, as an approximation to the reference stereo rendering is important both in terms of audio quality for the case where the stereo rendering is the final output of the object decoder, and in the case where the stereo signal is to be fed to a subsequent device, such as an MPEG Surround decoder operating in stereo downmix mode.
The present invention provides a jointly optimized combination of a matrixing and decorrelation method which enables an audio object decoder to exploit the full potential of an audio object coding scheme using an object downmix with more than one channel.
Embodiments of the present invention comprise the following features:
Embodiments of the present invention will be detailed subsequently referring to the appended drawings, in which:
a is the operation of audio object decoding to stereo;
b is the operation of audio object decoding;
a is the structure of a stereo processor;
b is an apparatus for synthesizing a rendered output signal;
a is the first aspect of the invention including a dry signal mix matrix C0, a pre-decorrelator mix matrix Q and a decorrelator upmix matrix P;
b is another aspect of the present invention which is implemented without a pre-decorrelator mix matrix;
c is another aspect of the present invention which is implemented without the decorrelator upmix matrix;
d is another aspect of the present of the present invention which is implemented with an additional gain compensation matrix G;
e is an implementation of the decorrelator downmix matrix Q and the decorrelator upmix matrix P when a single decorrelator is used;
f is an implementation of the dry mix matrix C0;
g is a detailed view of the actual combination of the result of the dry signal mix and the result of the decorrelator or decorrelator upmix operation;
The below-described embodiments are merely illustrative for the principles of the present invention for APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR SYNTHESIZING AN OUTPUT SIGNAL. It is understood that modifications and variations of the arrangements and the details described herein will be apparent to others skilled in the art. It is the intent, therefore, to be limited only by the scope of the impending patent claims and not by the specific details presented by way of description and explanation of the embodiments herein.
a illustrates the components of an audio object decoder 102 in the case where the desired output is stereo audio. The audio object downmix is fed into a stereo processor 201, which performs signal processing leading to a stereo audio output. This processing depends on matrix information furnished by the matrix calculator 202. The matrix information is derived from the object parameters, the downmix information and the supplied object rendering information, which describes the desired target rendering of the N objects into stereo by means of a rendering matrix.
b illustrates the components of an audio object decoder 102 in the case where the desired output is a general multichannel audio signal. The audio object downmix is fed into a stereo processor 201, which performs signal processing leading to a stereo signal output. This processing depends on matrix information furnished by the matrix calculator 202. The matrix information is derived from the object parameters, the downmix information and a reduced object rendering information, which is output by the rendering reducer 204. The reduced object rendering information describes the desired rendering of the N objects into stereo by means of a rendering matrix, and it is derived from the rendering info describing the rendering of N objects into M audio channels supplied to the audio object decoder 102, the object parameters, and the object downmix info. The additional processor 203 converts the stereo signal furnished by the stereo processor 201 into the final multichannel audio output, based on the rendering info, the downmix info and the object parameters. An MPEG Surround decoder operating in stereo downmix mode is a typical principal component of the additional processor 203.
a illustrates the structure of the stereo processor 201. Given the transmitted object downmix in the format of a bitstream output from a K channel audio encoder, this bitstream is first decoded by the audio decoder 301 into K time domain audio signals. These signals are then all transformed to the frequency domain by T/F unit 302. The time and frequency varying inventive enhanced matrixing defined by the matrix info supplied to the stereo processor 201 is performed on the resulting frequency domain signals X by the enhanced matrixing unit 303. This unit outputs a stereo signal Y′ in the frequency domain which is converted into time domain signal by the F/T unit 304.
b illustrates an apparatus for synthesizing a rendered output signal 350 having a first audio channel signal and a second audio channel signal in the case of a stereo rendering operation, or having more than two output channel signals in the case of a higher channel rendering. However, for a higher number of audio objects such as three or more the number of output channels is smaller than the number of original audio objects, which have contributed to the down-mix signal 352. Specifically, the downmix signal 352 has at least a first object downmix signal and a second object downmix signal, wherein the downmix signal represents a downmix of a plurality of audio object signals in accordance with downmix information 354. Specifically, the inventive audio synthesizer as illustrated in
As indicated in
The combiner 364 is configured for performing a weighted combination of the downmix signal 352 and the decorrelated signal 358. Furthermore, the combiner 364 is operative to calculate weighting factors for the weighted combination from the downmix information 354 and the target rendering information 360. The target rendering information indicates virtual positions of the audio objects in a virtual replay setup and indicates the specific placement of the audio objects in order to determine, whether a certain object is to be rendered in the first output channel or the second output channel, i.e., in a left output channel or a right output channel for a stereo rendering. When, however, a multi-channel rendering is performed, then the target rendering information additionally indicates whether a certain channel is to be placed more or less in a left surround or a right surround or center channel etc. Any rendering scenarios can be implemented, but will be different from each other due to the target rendering information in the form of the target rendering matrix, which is normally provided by the user and which will be discussed later on.
Finally, the combiner 364 uses the audio object parameter information 362 indicating energy information and correlation information describing the audio objects. In one embodiment, the audio object parameter information is given as an audio, object covariance matrix for each “tile” in the time/frequency plane. Stated differently, for each subband and for each time block, in which this subband is defined, a complete object covariance matrix, i.e., a matrix having power/energy information and correlation information is provided as the audio object parameter information 362.
When
Furthermore, the stereo processor 201 includes the decorrelator stage 356 of
Nevertheless, any specific location of a certain function is not decisive here, since an implementation of the present invention in software or within a dedicated digital signal processor or even within a general purpose personal computer is in the scope of the present invention. Therefore, the attribution of a certain function to a certain block is one way of implementing the present invention in hardware. When, however, all block circuit diagrams are considered as flow charts for illustrating a certain flow of operational steps, it becomes clear that the contribution of certain functions to a certain block is freely possible and can be done depending on implementation or programming requirements.
Furthermore, when
Subsequently, the detailed structure of an embodiment of the combiner 364 and the decorrelator stage 356 are discussed. Specifically, several different implementations of the functionality of the decorrelator stage 356 and the combiner 364 are discussed with respect to
Furthermore, the combiner unit 364 may or may not include the decorrelator upmix unit 404 having the decorrelator upmix matrix P.
Naturally, the separation of the matrixing units 404, 401 and 409 (
Furthermore, the decorrelator stage 356 can include the pre-decorrelator mix unit 402 or not.
a illustrates the structure of the inventive enhanced matrixing unit 303. The input X comprising at least two channels is fed into the dry signal mix unit 401 which performs a matrix operation according to the dry mix matrix C and outputs the stereo dry upmix signal Ŷ. The input X is also fed into the pre-decorrelator mix unit 402 which performs a matrix operation according to the pre-decorrelator mix matrix Q and outputs an Nd channel signal to be fed into the decorrelator unit 403. The resulting Nd channel decorrelated signal Z is subsequently fed into the decorrelator upmix unit 404 which performs a matrix operation according to the decorrelator upmix matrix P and outputs a decorrelated stereo signal. Finally, the decorrelated stereo signal is mixed by simple channel-wise addition with the stereo dry upmix signal Ŷ in order to form the output signal Y′ of the enhanced matrixing unit. The three mix matrices (C,Q,P) are all described by the matrix info supplied to the stereo processor 201 by the matrix calculator 202. One conventional system would only contain the lower dry signal branch. Such a system would perform poorly in the simple case where a stereo music object is contained in one object downmix channel and a mono voice object is contained in the other object downmix channel. This is so because the rendering of the music to stereo would rely entirely on frequency selective panning although a parametric stereo approach including decorrelation is known to achieve much higher perceived audio quality. An entirely different conventional system including decorrelation but based on two separate mono object downmixes would perform better for this particular example, but would on the other hand reach the same quality as the first mentioned dry stereo system for a backwards compatible downmix case where the music is kept in true stereo and the voice is mixed with equal weights to the two object downmix channels. As an example consider the case of a Karaoke-type target rendering consisting of the stereo music object alone. A separate treatment of each of the downmix channels then allows for a less optimal suppression of the voice object than a joint treatment taking into account transmitted stereo audio object information such as inter-channel correlation. The crucial feature of the present invention is to enable the highest possible audio quality, not only in both of these simple situations, but also for much more complex combinations of object downmix and rendering.
b illustrates, as stated above, a situation where, in contrast to
c illustrates a situation, in which the predecorrelator matrix Q is provided and implemented in the decorrelator stage 356, and in which the decorrelator upmix matrix P is not necessitated or is “absorbed” in matrix Q.
Furthermore,
The decorrelator stage 356 may include a single decorrelator or two decorrelators.
f illustrates a circuit-like implementation of the dry signal mix unit 401, which is indicated as C0 and which has, in the two by two embodiment, two lines in two columns. The matrix elements are illustrated in the circuit-like structure as the weighting factors cij. Furthermore, the weighted channels are combined using adders as is visible from
g illustrates in detail the functionality of adding stage 454 in
Regarding the gain compensation matrix G 409, the elements of the gain compensation matrix are only on the diagonal of matrix G. In the two by two case, which is illustrated in
The present invention offers solutions for Nd equal to 1, 2 or more, but less than the number of audio objects. Specifically, the number of decorrelators is, in an embodiment, equal to the number of audio channel signals of the rendered output signal or even smaller than the number of audio channel signals of the rendered output signal 350.
In the following text, a mathematical description of the present invention will be outlined. All signals considered here are subband samples from a modulated filter bank or windowed FFT analysis of discrete time signals. It is understood that these subbands have to be transformed back to the discrete time domain by corresponding synthesis filter bank operations. A signal block of L samples represents the signal in a time and frequency interval which is a part of the perceptually motivated tiling of the time-frequency plane that is applied for the description of signal properties. In this setting, the given audio objects can be represented as N rows of length L in a matrix,
An example for such an object audio parameter information matrix E is illustrated in
On the other hand, the off-diagonal element eij indicate a respective correlation measure between audio objects i, j in the corresponding subband and time block. It is clear from
The downmix matrix D of size K×N where K>1 determines the K channel downmix signal in the form of a matrix with K rows through the matrix multiplication
X=DS. (2)
Values of downmix matrix elements between 0 and 1 are possible. Specifically, the value of 0.5 indicates that a certain object is included in a downmix signal, but only with half its energy. Thus, when an audio object such object number 4 is equally distributed to both downmix signal channels, then d24 and d14 would be equal to 0.5. This way of downmixing is an energy-conserving downmix operation which is advantageous for some situations. Alternatively, however, a non-energy conserving downmix can be used as well, in which the whole audio object is introduced into the left downmix channel and the right downmix channel so that the energy of this audio object has been doubled with respect to the other audio objects within the downmix signal.
At the lower portion of
The user controlled object rendering matrix A of size M×N determines the M channel target rendering of the audio objects in the form of a matrix with M rows through the matrix multiplication
Y=AS. (3)
It will be assumed throughout the following derivation that M=2 since the focus is on stereo rendering. Given an initial rendering matrix to more than two channels, and a downmix rule from those several channels into two channels it is obvious for those skilled in the art to derive the corresponding rendering matrix A of size 2×N for stereo rendering. This reduction is performed in the rendering reducer 204. It will also be assumed for simplicity that K=2 such that the object downmix is also a stereo signal. The case of a stereo object downmix is furthermore the most important special case in terms of application scenarios.
Specifically, a matrix element aij, indicates whether a portion or the whole object j is to be rendered in the specific output channel i or not. The lower portion of
Regarding audio object AO1, the user wants that this audio object is rendered at the left side of a replay scenario. Therefore, this object is placed at the position of a left speaker in a (virtual) replay room, which results in the first column of the rendering matrix A to be (10). Regarding the second audio object, a22 is one and a12 is 0 which means that the second audio object is to be rendered on the right side.
Audio object 3 is to be rendered in the middle between the left speaker and the right speaker so that 50% of the level or signal of this audio object go into the left channel and 50% of the level or signal go into the right channel so that the corresponding third column of the target rendering matrix A is (0.5 length 0.5).
Similarly, any placement between the left speaker and the right speaker can be indicated by the target rendering matrix. Regarding audio object 4, the placement is more to the right side, since the matrix element a24 is larger than a14. Similarly, the fifth audio object A05 is rendered to be more to the left speaker as indicated by the target rendering matrix elements a15 and a25. The target rendering matrix A additionally allows to not render a certain audio object at all. This is exemplarily illustrated by the sixth column of the target rendering matrix A which has zero elements.
It will be assumed throughout the following derivation that M=2 since the focus is on stereo rendering. Given an initial rendering matrix to more than two channels, and a downmix rule from those several channels into two channels it is obvious for those skilled in the art to derive the corresponding rendering matrix A of size 2×N for stereo rendering. This reduction is performed in the rendering reducer 204. It will also be assumed for simplicity that K=2 such that the object downmix is also a stereo signal. The case of a stereo object downmix is furthermore the most important special case in terms of application scenarios.
Disregarding for a moment the effects of lossy coding of the object downmix audio signal, the task of the audio object decoder is to generate an approximation in the perceptual sense of the target rendering Y of the original audio objects, given the rendering matrix A, the downmix X the downmix matrix D, and object parameters. The structure of the inventive enhanced matrixing unit 303 is given in
Assuming the decorrelators are power preserving, the decorrelated signal matrix Z has a diagonal Nd×Nd covariance matrix Rz=ZZ* whose diagonal values are equal to those of the covariance matrix
QXX*Q* (4)
of the pre-decorrelator mix processed object downmix. (Here and in the following, the star denotes the complex conjugate transpose matrix operation. It is also understood that the deterministic covariance matrices of the form UV* which are used throughout for computational convenience can be replaced by expectations E{UV*}.) Moreover, all the decorrelated signals can be assumed to be uncorrelated from the object downmix signals. Hence, the covariance R′ of the combined output of the inventive enhanced matrixing unit 303,
V=Ŷ+PZ=CX+PZ, (5)
can be written as a sum of the covariance {circumflex over (R)}=ŶŶ* of the dry signal mix Ŷ=CX and the resulting decorrelator output covariance
R′={circumflex over (R)}+PRZP*. (6)
The object parameters typically carry information on object powers and selected inter-object correlations. From these parameters, a model E is achieved of the N×N object covariance SS*.
SS*=E. (7)
The data available to the audio object decoder is in this case described by the triplet of matrices (D,E,A), and the method taught by the present invention consists of using this data to jointly optimize the waveform match of the combined output (5) and its covariance (6) to the target rendering signal (4). For a given dry signal mix matrix, the problem at hand is to aim at the correct target covariance R′=R which can be estimated by
R=YY*=ASS*A*=AEA*. (8)
With the definition of the error matrix
ΔR=R−{circumflex over (R)}, (9)
a comparison with (6) leads to the design requirement
PRZP*=ΔR. (10)
Since the left hand side of (10) is a positive semidefinite matrix for any choice of decorrelator mix matrix P, it is necessitated that the error matrix of (9) is a positive semidefinite matrix as well. In order to clarify the details of the subsequent formulas, let the covariances of the dry signal mix and the target rendering be parameterized as follows
For the error matrix
the requirement to be positive semidefinite can be expressed as the three conditions
ΔL≧0,ΔR≧0,ΔLΔR−(Δp)2≧0. (13)
Subsequently,
As indicated in block 1002, the dry mix matrix can be calculated using equation (15). Particularly, the dry mix matrix C0 is calculated such that a best match of the target rendering signal is obtained by using the downmix signals, assuming that the decorrelated signal is not to be added at all. Thus, the dry mix matrix makes sure that a mix matrix output signal wave form matches the target rendering signal as close as possible without any additional decorrelated signal. This prerequisite for the dry mix matrix is particularly useful for keeping the portion of the decorrelated signal in the output channel as low as possible. Generally, the decorrelated signal is a signal which has been modified by the decorrelator to a large extent. Thus, this signal usually has artifacts such a colorization, time smearing and bad transient response. Therefore, this embodiment provides the advantage that less signal from the decorrelation process usually results in a better audio output quality. By performing a wave form matching, i.e., weighting and combining the two channels or more channels in the downmix signal so that these channels after the dry mix operation approach the target rendering signal as close as possible, only a minimum amount of decorrelated signal is needed.
The combiner 364 is operative to calculate the weighting factors so the result 452 of a mixing operation of the first object downmix signal and the second object downmix signal is wave form-matched to a target rendering result, which would as far as possible correspond to a situation which would be obtained, when rendering the original audio objects using the target rendering information 360 provided that the parametric audio object information 362 would be a loss less representation of the audio objects. Hence, exact reconstruction of the signal can never be guaranteed, even with an unquantized E matrix. One minimizes the error in a mean squared sense. Hence, one aims at getting a waveform match, and the powers and the cross-correlations are reconstructed.
As soon as the dry mix matrix C0 is calculated e.g. in the above way, then the covariance matrix {circumflex over (R)}0 of the dry mix signal can be calculated. Specifically, it is advantageous to use the equation written to the right of
Subsequent to the calculation steps 1000, 1002, 1004 the dry signal mix matrix C0, the covariance matrix R of the target rendering signal and the covariance matrix {circumflex over (R)}0 of the dry mix signal are available.
For the specific determination of matrices Q, P four different embodiments are subsequently described. Additionally, a situation of
In a first embodiment of the present invention, the operation of the matrix calculator 202 is designed as follows. The dry upmix matrix is first derived as to achieve the least squares solution to the signal waveform match
Ŷ=CX≈Y=AS, (14)
In this context, it is noted that Ŷ=C0·X=C0·D·S is valid. Furthermore, the following equation holds true:
The solution to this problem is given by
C≈C0=AED*(DED*)−1 (15)
and it has the additional well known property of least squares solutions, which can also easily be verified from (13) that the error ΔY=Y−Ŷ0=AS−C0X is orthogonal to the approximation Ŷ=C0X. Therefore, the cross terms vanish in the following computation,
It follows that
ΔR=(ΔY)(ΔY)*, (17)
which is trivially positive semi definite such that (10) can be solved. In a symbolic way the solution is
P=TRZ−1/2, (18)
Here the second factor RZ−1/2 is simply defined by the element-wise operation on the diagonal, and the matrix T solves the matrix equation TT*=ΔR. There is a large freedom in the choice of solution to this matrix equation. The method taught by the present invention is to start from the singular value decomposition of ΔR. For this symmetric matrix it reduces to the usual eigenvector decomposition,
where the eigenvector matrix U is unitary and its columns contain the eigenvectors corresponding to the eigenvalues sorted in decreasing size λmax≧λmin≧0. The first solution with one decorrelator (Nd=1) taught by the present invention is obtained by setting λmin=0 in (19), and inserting the corresponding natural approximation
in (18). The full solution with Nd=2 decorrelators is obtained by adding the missing least significant contribution from the smallest eigenvalue λmin of ΔR and adding a second column to (20) corresponding to a product of the first factor U of (19) and the element wise square root of the diagonal eigenvalue matrix. Written out in detail this amounts to
Subsequently, the calculation of matrix P in accordance with the first embodiment is summarized in connection with
Based on the chosen matrix Q, the covariance matrix Rz of the matrixed decorrelated signal is calculated using the equation written to the right of box 1103 in
Thus, the first embodiment is unique in that C0 and P are calculated. It is referred that, in order to guarantee the correct resulting correlation structure of the output, one needs two decorrelators. On the other hand, it is an advantage to be able to use only one decorrelator. This solution is indicated by equation (20). Specifically, the decorrelator having the smaller eigenvalue is implemented.
In a second embodiment of the present invention the operation of the matrix calculator 202 is designed as follows. The decorrelator mix matrix is restricted to be of the form
With this restriction the single decorrelated signal covariance matrix is a scalar RZ=rZ and the covariance of the combined output (6) becomes
where α=c2rZ. A full match to the target covariance R′=R is impossible in general, but the perceptually important normalized correlation between the output channels can be adjusted to that of the target in a large range of situations. Here, the target correlation is defined by
and the correlation achieved by the combined output (23) is given by
Equating (24) and (25) leads to a quadratic equation in α,
p2({circumflex over (L)}+α)({circumflex over (R)}+α)=({circumflex over (p)}−α)2. (26)
For the cases where (26) has a positive solution α=α0>0, the second embodiment of the present invention teaches to use the constant c=√{square root over (α0/rZ)} in the mix matrix definition (22). If both solutions of (26) are positive, the one yielding a smaller norm of c is to be used. In the case where no such solution exists, the decorrelator contribution is set to zero by choosing c=0, since complex solutions of c lead to perceptible phase distortions in the decorrelated signals. The computation of {circumflex over (p)} can be implemented in two different ways, either directly from the signal Ŷ or incorporating the object covariance matrix in combination with the down-mix and rendering information, as {circumflex over (R)}=CDED*C*. Here the first method will result in a complex-valued {circumflex over (p)} and therefore, at the right-hand side of (26) the square must be taken from the real part or magnitude of ({circumflex over (p)}−α), respectively. Alternatively, however, even a complex valued {circumflex over (p)} can be used. Such a complex value indicates a correlation with a specific phase term which is also useful for specific embodiments.
A feature of this embodiment, as it can be seen from (25), is that it can only decrease the correlation compared to that of the dry mix. That is, ρ′≦{circumflex over (ρ)}={circumflex over (p)}/√{square root over ({circumflex over (L)}{circumflex over (R)}.
To summarize, the second embodiment is illustrated as shown in
Thus, in the second embodiment, one calculates P using a special case of one decorrelator distribution for the two channels indicated by matrix P in box 1201. For some cases, the solution does not exist and one simply shuts off the decorrelator. An advantage of this embodiment is that it never adds a synthetic signal with positive correlation. This is beneficial, since such a signal could be perceived as a localised phantom source which is an artefact decreasing the audio quality of the rendered output signal. In view of the fact that power issues are not considered in the derivation, one could get a mis-match in the output signal which means that the output signal has more or less power that the downmix signal. In this case, one could implement an additional gain compensation in an embodiment in order to further enhance audio quality.
In a third embodiment of the present invention the operation of the matrix calculator 202 is designed as follows. The starting point is a gain compensated dry mix
where, for instance, the uncompensated dry mix Ŷ0 is the result of the least squares approximation Ŷ0=C0X with the mix matrix given by (15). Furthermore, C=GC0, where G is a diagonal matrix with entries g1 and g2. In this case
and the error matrix is
It is then taught by the third embodiment of the present invention to choose the compensation gains (g1,g2) so as to minimize a weighted sum of the error powers
w1ΔL+w2ΔR=w1(L−g12{circumflex over (L)}0)+w2(R−g22{circumflex over (R)}0), (30)
under the constrains given by (13). Example choices of weights in (30) are (w1,w2)=(1,1) or (w1,w2)=(R,L). The resulting error matrix ΔR is then used as input to the computation of the decorrelator mix matrix P according to the steps of equations (18)-(21) An attractive feature of this embodiment is that in cases where error signal Y−Ŷ0 is similar to the dry upmix, the amount of decorrelated signal added to the final output is smaller than that added to the final output by the first embodiment of the present invention.
In the third embodiment, which is summarized in connection with
The third embodiment is advantageous in that the dry mix is not only wave form-matched but, in addition, gain compensated. This helps to further reduce the amount of decorrelated signal so that any artefacts incurred by adding the decorrelated signal are reduced as well. Thus, the third embodiment attempts to get the best possible from a combination of gain compensation and decorrelator addition. Again, the aim is to fully reproduce the covariance structure including channel powers and to use as little as possible of the synthetic signal such as by minimising equation (30).
Subsequently, a fourth embodiment is discussed. In step 1401, the single decorrelator is implemented. Thus, a low complexity embodiment is created since a single decorrelator is, for a practical implementation, most advantageous. In the subsequent step 1101, the covariance matrix data R is calculated as outlined and discussed in connection with step 1101 of the first embodiment. Alternatively, however, the covariance matrix data R can also be calculated as indicated in step 1303 of
When, however, it is determined that the sign of Δp is positive, an addition of the decorrelated signal is completely eliminated such as by setting to zero, the elements of matrix P. Alternatively, the addition of a decorrelated signal can be reduced to a value above zero but to a value smaller than a value which would be there should the sign be negative. However, the matrix elements of matrix P are not only set to smaller values but are set to zero as indicated in block 1404 in
Thus, the fourth embodiment combines some features of the first embodiment and relies on a single decorrelator solution, but includes a test for determining the quality of the decorrelated signal so that the decorrelated signal can be reduced or completely eliminated, when a quality indicator such as the value Δp in the covariance matrix ΔR of the error signal (added signal) becomes positive.
The choice of pre-decorrelator matrix Q should be based on perceptual considerations, since the second order theory above is insensitive to the specific matrix used. This implies also that the considerations leading to a choice of Q are independent of the selection between each of the aforementioned embodiments.
A first solution taught by the present invention consists of using the mono downmix of the dry stereo mix as input to all decorrelators. In terms of matrix elements this means that
qn,k=ci,k+c2,k, k=1, 2; n=1, 2, . . . , Nd, (31)
where {qn,k} are the matrix elements of Q and {cn,k} are the matrix elements of C0.
A second solution taught by the present invention leads to a pre-decorrelator matrix Q derived from the downmix matrix D alone. The derivation is based on the assumption that all objects have unit power and are uncorrelated. An upmix matrix from the objects to their individual prediction errors is formed given that assumption. Then the square of the pre-decorrelator weights are chosen in proportion to total predicted object error energy across down-mix channels. The same weights are finally used for all decorrelators. In detail, these weights are obtained by first forming the N×N matrix,
W=I−D*(DD*)−1D, (32)
and then deriving an estimated object prediction error energy matrix W0 defined by setting all off-diagonal values of (32) to zero. Denoting the diagonal values of DW0D* by t1,t2, which represent the total object error energy contributions to each downmix channel, the final choice of predecorrelator matrix elements is given by
Regarding a specific implementation of the decorrelators, all decorrelators such as reverberators or any other decorrelators can be used. In an embodiment, however, the decorrelators should be power-conserving. This means that the power of the decorrelator output signal should be the same as the power of the decorrelator input signal. Nevertheless, deviations incurred by a non-power-conserving decorrelator can also be absorbed, for example by taking this into account when matrix P is calculated.
As stated before, embodiments try to avoid adding a synthetic signal with positive correlation, since such a signal could be perceived as a localised synthetic phantom source. In the second embodiment, this is explicitly avoided due to the specific structure of matrix P as indicated in block 1201. Furthermore, this problem is explicitly circumvented in the fourth embodiment due to the checking operation in step 1402. Other ways of determining the quality of the decorrelated signal and, specifically, the correlation characteristics so that such phantom source artefacts can be avoided are available for those skilled in the art and can be used for switching off the addition of the decorrelated signal as in the form of some embodiments or can be used for reducing the power of the decorrelated signal and increasing the power of the dry signal, in order to have a gain compensated output signal.
Although all matrices E, D, A have been described as complex matrices, these matrices can also be real-valued. Nevertheless, the present invention is also useful in connection with complex matrices D, A, E actually having complex coefficients with an imaginary part different from zero.
Furthermore, it will be often the case that the matrix D and the matrix A have a much lower spectral and time resolution compared to the matrix E which has the highest time and frequency resolution of all matrices. Specifically, the target rendering matrix and the downmix matrix will not depend on the frequency, but may depend on time. With respect to the downmix matrix, this might occur in a specific optimised downmix operation. Regarding the target rendering matrix, this might be the case in connection with moving audio objects which can change their position between left and right from time to time.
The below-described embodiments are merely illustrative for the principles of the present invention. It is understood that modifications and variations of the arrangements and the details described herein will be apparent to others skilled in the art. It is the intent, therefore, to be limited only by the scope of the impending patent claims and not by the specific details presented by way of description and explanation of the embodiments herein.
Depending on certain implementation requirements of the inventive methods, the inventive methods can be implemented in hardware or in software. The implementation can be performed using a digital storage medium, in particular, a disc, a DVD or a CD having electronically-readable control signals stored thereon, which co-operate with programmable computer systems such that the inventive methods are performed. Generally, the present invention is therefore a computer program product with a program code stored on a machine-readable carrier, the program code being operated for performing the inventive methods when the computer program product runs on a computer. In other words, the inventive methods are, therefore, a computer program having a program code for performing at least one of the inventive methods when the computer program runs on a computer.
While this invention has been described in terms of several advantageous embodiments, there are alterations, permutations, and equivalents which fall within the scope of this invention. It should also be noted that there are many alternative ways of implementing the methods and compositions of the present invention. It is therefore intended that the following appended claims be interpreted as including all such alterations, permutations, and equivalents as fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application is a U.S. national entry of PCT Patent Application Serial No. PCT/EP2008/003282 filed 23 Apr. 2008, and claims priority to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/914,267 filed 26 Apr. 2007, each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/003282 | 4/23/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/22/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/131903 | 11/6/2008 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100094631 A1 | Apr 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60914267 | Apr 2007 | US |