The present invention relates to the field of the coding of digital signals.
The coding according to the invention is adapted especially for the transmission and/or storage of digital signals such as audiofrequency signals (speech, music or other).
The present invention pertains more particularly to waveform coding of ADPCM (for “Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation”) coding type and especially to coding of ADPCM type with embedded codes making it possible to deliver quantization indices with scalable binary train.
The general principle of embedded-codes ADPCM coding/decoding specified by recommendation ITU-T G.722 or ITU-T G.727 is such as described with reference to
It comprises:
a prediction module 110 making it possible to give the prediction of the signal xPB(n) on the basis of the previous samples of the quantized error signal eQB(n′)=yI
a subtraction module 120 which deducts from the input signal x(n) its prediction xPB(n) to obtain a prediction error signal denoted e(n).
a quantization module 130 QB+K for the error signal which receives as input the error signal e(n) so as to give quantization indices IB+K(n) consisting of B+K bits. The quantization module QB+K is of the embedded-codes type, that is to say it comprises a core quantizer with B bits and quantizers with B+k k=1, . . . , K bits which are embedded on the core quantizer.
In the case of the ITU-T G.722 standard, the decision levels and the reconstruction levels of the quantizers QB, QB+1, QB+2 for B=4 are defined by tables IV and VI of the overview article describing the G.722 standard by X. Maitre. “7 kHz audio coding within 64 kbit/s”, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communication, Vol. 6-2, February 1988.
The quantization index IB+K(n) of B+K bits at the output of the quantization module QB+K transmitted via the transmission channel 140 to the decoder such as described with reference to
The coder also comprises:
a module 150 for deleting the K low-order bits of the index IB+K(n) so as to give a low bitrate index IB(n);
an inverse quantization module 120 (QB)−1 to give as output a quantized error signal eQB(n)=yI
an adaptation module 170 QAdapt for the quantizers and inverse quantizers to give a level control parameter v(n) also called scale factor, for the following instant;
an addition module 180 for adding the prediction xPB(n) to the quantized error signal to give the low bitrate reconstructed signal rB(n);
an adaptation module 190 PAdapt for the prediction module based on the quantized error signal on B bits eQB(n) and on the signal eQB(n) filtered by 1+Pz(z).
It may be observed that in
This part is found identically in the embedded-codes ADPCM decoder such as described with reference to
The embedded-codes ADPCM decoder of
The output signal r′B(n) for B bits will be equal to the sum of the prediction of the signal and of the output of the inverse quantizer with B bits. This part 255 of the decoder is identical to the low bitrate local decoder 155 of
Employing the bitrate indicator mode and the selector 220, the decoder can enhance the signal restored.
Indeed if mode indicates that B+1 bits have been transmitted, the output will be equal to the sum of the prediction xPB(n) and of the output of the inverse quantizer 230 with B+1 bits y′I
If mode indicates that B+2 bits have been transmitted, then the output will be equal to the sum of the prediction xPB(n) and of the output of the inverse quantizer 240 with B+2 bits y′I
By using the z-transform notation, the following may be written for this looped structure:
R
B+k(z)=X(Z)+QB+k(z)
by defining the quantization noise with B+k bits QB+k(z) by:
Q
B+k(z)=EQB+k(z)−E(z)
The embedded-codes ADPCM coding of the ITU-T G.722 standard (hereinafter named G.722) carries out a coding of the signals in broadband which are defined with a minimum bandwidth of [50-7000 Hz] and sampled at 16 kHz. The G.722 coding is an ADPCM coding of each of the two sub-bands of the signal [50-4000 Hz] and [4000-7000 Hz] obtained by decomposition of the signal by quadrature mirror filters. The low band is coded by embedded-codes ADPCM coding on 6, 5 and 4 bits while the high band is coded by an ADPCM coder of 2 bits per sample. The total bitrate will be 64, 56 or 48 bit/s according to the number of bits used for decoding the low band.
This coding was first used in ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) and then in applications of audio coding on IP networks.
By way of example, in the G.722 standard, the 8 bits are apportioned in the following manner such as represented in
2 bits Ih1 and Ih2 for the high band
6 bits IL1 IL2 IL3 IL4 IL5 IL6 for the low band.
Bits IL5 and IL6 may be “stolen” or replaced with data and constitute the low band enhancement bits. Bits IL1 IL2 IL3 IL4 constitute the low band core bits.
Thus, a frame of a signal quantized according to the G.722 standard consists of quantization indices coded on 8, 7 or 6 bits. The frequency of transmission of the index being 8 kHz, the bitrate will be 64, 56 or 48 kbit/s.
For a quantizer with a large number of levels, the spectrum of the quantization noise will be relatively flat as shown by
A shaping of the coding noise is therefore necessary. A coding noise shaping adapted to an embedded-codes coding would be moreover desirable.
A noise shaping technique for a coding of PCM (for “Pulse Code Modulation”) type with embedded codes is described in the recommendation ITU-T G.711.1 “Wideband embedded extension for G.711 pulse code modulation” or “G.711.1: A wideband extension to ITU-T G.711”. Y. Hiwasaki, S. Sasaki, H. Ohmuro, T. Mori, J. Seong, M. S. Lee, B. Kövesi, S. Ragot, J.-L. Garcia, C. Marro, L. M., J. Xu, V. Malenovsky, J. Lapierre, R. Lefebvre, EUSIPCO, Lausanne, 2008.
This recommendation thus describes a coding with shaping of the coding noise for a core bitrate coding. A perceptual filter for shaping the coding noise is calculated on the basis of the past decoded signals, arising from an inverse core quantizer. A core bitrate local decoder therefore makes it possible to calculate the noise shaping filter. Thus, at the decoder, it is possible to calculate this noise shaping filter on the basis of the core bitrate decoded signals.
A quantizer delivering enhancement bits is used at the coder.
The decoder receiving the core binary stream and the enhancement bits, calculates the filter for shaping the coding noise in the same manner as at the coder on the basis of the core bitrate decoded signal and applies this filter to the output signal from the inverse quantizer of the enhancement bits, the shaped high-bitrate signal being obtained by adding the filtered signal to the decoded core signal.
The shaping of the noise thus enhances the perceptual quality of the core bitrate signal. It offers a limited enhancement in quality in respect of the enhancement bits. Indeed, the shaping of the coding noise is not performed in respect of the coding of the enhancement bits, the input of the quantizer being the same for the core quantization as for the enhanced quantization.
The decoder must then delete a resulting spurious component through suitably adapted filtering, when the enhancement bits are decoded in addition to the core bits.
The additional calculation of a filter at the decoder increases the complexity of the decoder.
This technique is not used in the already existing standard scalable decoders of G.722 or G.727 decoder type. There therefore exists a requirement to enhance the quality of the signals whatever the bitrate while remaining compatible with existing standard scalable decoders.
The present invention is aimed at enhancing the situation.
For this purpose, it proposes a method of hierarchical coding of a digital audio signal comprising for a current frame of the input signal:
a core coding, delivering a scalar quantization index for each sample of the current frame and
at least one enhancement coding delivering indices of scalar quantization for each coded sample of an enhancement signal. The method is such that the enhancement coding comprises a step of obtaining a filter for shaping the coding noise used to determine a target signal and in that the indices of scalar quantization of the said enhancement signal are determined by minimizing the error between a set of possible values of scalar quantization and the said target signal.
Thus, a shaping of the coding noise of the enhancement signal of higher bitrate is performed. The synthesis-based analysis scheme forming the subject of the invention does not make it necessary to perform any complementary signal processing at the decoder, as may be the case in the coding noise shaping solutions of the prior art.
The signal received at the decoder will therefore be able to be decoded by a standard decoder able to decode the signal of core bitrate and of embedded bitrates which does not require any noise shaping calculation nor any corrective term.
The quality of the decoded signal is therefore enhanced whatever the bitrate available at the decoder.
The various particular embodiments mentioned hereinafter may be added independently or in combination with one another, to the steps of the method defined hereinabove.
Thus, a mode of implementation of the determination of the target signal is such that for a current enhancement coding stage, the method comprises the following steps for a current sample:
obtaining an enhancement coding error signal by combining the input signal of the hierarchical coding with a signal reconstructed partially on the basis of a coding of a previous coding stage and of the past samples of the reconstructed signals of the current enhancement coding stage;
filtering by the noise shaping filter obtained, of the enhancement coding error signal so as to obtain the target signal;
calculation of the reconstructed signal for the current sample by addition of the reconstructed signal arising from the coding of the previous stage and of the signal arising from the quantization step;
adaptation of memories of the noise shaping filter on the basis of the signal arising from the quantization step.
The arrangement of the operations which is described here leads to a shaping of the coding noise by operations of greatly reduced complexity.
In a particular embodiment, the set of possible scalar quantization values and the quantization value of the error signal for the current sample are values denoting quantization reconstruction levels, scaled by a level control parameter calculated with respect to the core bitrate quantization indices.
Thus, the values are adapted to the output level of the core coding.
In a particular embodiment, the values denoting quantization reconstruction levels for an enhancement stage k are defined by the difference between the values denoting the reconstruction levels of the quantization of an embedded quantizer with B+k bits, B denoting the number of bits of the core coding and the values denoting the quantization reconstruction levels of an embedded quantizer with B+k−1 bits, the reconstruction levels of the embedded quantizer with B+k bits being defined by splitting the reconstruction levels of the embedded quantizer with B+k−1 bits into two.
Moreover, the values denoting quantization reconstruction levels for the enhancement stage k are stored in a memory space and indexed as a function of the core bitrate quantization and enhancement indices.
The output values of the enhancement quantizer, which are stored directly in ROM, do not have to be recalculated for each sampling instant by subtracting the output values of the quantizer with B+k bit from those of the quantizer with B+k−1 bits. They are moreover for example arranged 2 by 2 in a table easily indexable by the index of the previous stage.
In a particular embodiment, the number of possible values of scalar quantization varies for each sample.
Thus, it is possible to adapt the number of enhancement bits as a function of the samples to be coded.
In another variant embodiment, the number of coded samples of said enhancement signal, giving the scalar quantization indices, is less than the number of samples of the input signal.
This may for example be the case when the allocated number of enhancement bits is set to zero for certain samples.
A possible mode of implementation of the core coding is for example an ADPCM coding using a scalar quantization and a prediction filter.
Another possible mode of implementation of the core coding is for example a PCM coding.
The core coding can also comprise a shaping of the coding noise for example with the following steps for a current sample:
obtaining a prediction signal for the coding noise on the basis of past quantization noise samples and on the basis of past samples of quantization noise filtered by a predetermined noise shaping filter;
combining the input signal of the core coding and the coding noise prediction signal so as to obtain a modified input signal to be quantized.
A shaping of the coding noise of lesser complexity is thus carried out for the core coding.
In a particular embodiment, the noise shaping filter is defined by an ARMA filter or a succession of ARMA filters.
Thus, this type of weighting function, comprising a value in the numerator and a value in the denominator, has the advantage through the value in the denominator of taking the signal spikes into account and through the value in the numerator of attenuating these spikes, thus affording optimal shaping of the quantization noise. The cascaded succession of ARMA filters allows better modeling of the masking filter by components for modeling the envelope of the spectrum of the signal and periodicity or quasi-periodicity components.
In a particular embodiment, the noise shaping filter is decomposed into two cascaded ARMA filtering cells of decoupled spectral slope and formantic shape.
Thus, each filter is adapted as a function of the spectral characteristics of the input signal and is therefore appropriate for the signals exhibiting various types of spectral slopes.
Advantageously, the noise shaping filter (W(z)) used by the enhancement coding is also used by the core coding, thus reducing the complexity of implementation.
In a particular embodiment, the noise shaping filter is calculated as a function of said input signal so as to best adapt to different input signals.
In a variant embodiment, the noise shaping filter is calculated on the basis of a signal locally decoded by the core coding.
The present invention also pertains to a hierarchical coder of a digital audio signal for a current frame of the input signal comprising:
a core coding stage, delivering a scalar quantization index for each sample of the current frame; and
at least one enhancement coding stage delivering indices of scalar quantization for each coded sample of an enhancement signal.
The coder is such that the enhancement coding stage comprises a module for obtaining a filter for shaping the coding noise used to determine a target signal and a quantization module delivering the indices of scalar quantization of said enhancement signal by minimizing the error between a set of possible values of scalar quantization and said target signal.
It also pertains to a computer program comprising code instructions for the implementation of the steps of the coding method according to the invention, when these instructions are executed by a processor.
The invention pertains finally to a storage means readable by a processor storing a computer program such as described.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will be more clearly apparent on reading the following description, given solely by way of nonlimiting example and with reference to the appended drawings in which:
a and 6b represent a block diagram of an enhancement coding stage and of an enhancement coding method according to the invention;
Hereinafter in the document, the term “prediction” is systematically employed to describe calculations using past samples only.
With reference to
This coder comprises a core bitrate coding stage 500 with quantization on B bits, of for example ADPCM coding type such as the standardized G.722 or G.727 coder or PCM (“Pulse Code Modulation”) coder such as the G.711 standardized coder modified as a function of the outputs of the block 520.
The block referenced 510 represents this core coding stage with shaping of the coding noise, that is to say masking of the noise of the core coding, described in greater detail subsequently with reference to
The invention such as presented, also pertains to the case where no masking of the coding noise in the core part is performed. Moreover, the term “core coder” is used in the broad sense in this document. Thus, an existing multi-bitrate coder such as for example ITU-T G.722 with 56 or 64 kbit/s may be considered to be a “core coder”. In the extreme, it is also possible to consider a core coder with 0 kbit/s, that is to say to apply the enhancement coding technique which forms the subject of the present invention right from the first step of the coding. In the latter case the enhancement coding becomes core coding.
The core coding stage described here with reference to
The core coding stage receives as input the signal x(n) and provides as output the quantization index IB(n), the signal rB(n) reconstructed on the basis of IB(n) and the scale factor of the quantizer v(n) in the case for example of an ADPCM coding as described with reference to
The coder such as represented in
An enhancement coding stage thus represented will subsequently be detailed with reference to
Generally, each enhancement coding stage k has as input the signal x(n), the optimal index IB+k−1(n), the concatenation of the index IB(n) of the core coding and of the indices of the previous enhancement stages J1(n), . . . , Jk−1(n) or equivalently the set of these indices, the signal reconstructed at the previous step rB+k−1(n), the parameters of the masking filter and if appropriate, the scale factor v(n) in the case of an adaptive coding.
This enhancement stage provides as output the quantization index Jk(n) for the enhancement bits for this coding stage which will be concatenated with the index IB+k−1(n) in the concatenation module 560. The enhancement stage k also provides the reconstructed signal rB+k(n) as output. It should be noted that here the index Jk(n) represents one bit for each sample of index n; however, in the general case Jk(n) may represent several bits per sample if the number of possible quantization values is greater than 2.
Some of the stages correspond to bits to be transmitted J1(n), . . . , Jk1(n) which will be concatenated with the index IB(n) so that the resulting index can be decoded by a standard decoder such as represented and described subsequently in
Other bits Jk1+1(n), . . . , Jk2(n) correspond to enhancement bits by increasing the bitrate and masking and require an additional decoding module described with reference to
The coder of
The enhancement coding stages such as represented here make it possible to provide enhancement bits offering increased quality of the signal at the decoder, whatever the bitrate of the decoded signal and without modifying the decoder and therefore without any extra complexity at the decoder.
Thus, a module Eak of
The enhancement coding performed by this coding stage comprises a quantization step Qenhk which delivers as output an index and a quantization value minimizing the error between a set of possible quantization values and a target signal determined by use of the coding noise shaping filter.
Coders comprising embedded-codes quantizers are considered herein.
The stage k makes it possible to obtain the enhancement bit Jk or a group of bits Jk k=1, . . . , GK.
It comprises a module EAk-1 for subtracting from the input signal x(n) the signal synthesized at stage k rB+k(n) for each previous sample n′=n−1, . . . , n−ND of a current frame and of the signal rB+k−1(n) of the previous stage for the sample n, so as to give a coding error signal eB+k(n).
Rather than minimizing a quadratic error criterion which will give rise to quantization noise with a flat spectrum as represented with reference to
The stage k thus comprises a filtering module EAk-2 for filtering the error signal eB+k(n) by the weighting function W(z). This weighting function may also be used for the shaping of the noise in the core coding stage.
The noise shaping filter is here equal to the inverse of the spectral weighting, that is to say:
This shaping filter is of ARMA type (“AutoRegressive Moving Average”). Its transfer function comprises a numerator of order NN and a denominator of order ND. Thus, the block EAk-1 serves essentially to define the memories of the non-recursive part of the filter W(z), which correspond to the denominator of HM(z). The definition of the memories of the recursive part of W(z) is not shown for the sake of conciseness, but it is deduced from ewB+k(n) and from enh2I
This filtering module gives, as output, a filtered signal ewB+k(n) corresponding to the target signal.
The role of the spectral weighting is to shape the spectrum of the coding error, this being carried out by minimizing the energy of the weighted error.
A quantization module EAk-3 performs the quantization step which, on the basis of possible values of quantization output, seeks to minimize the weighted error criterion according to the following equation:
E
j
B+k
=[e
w
B+k(n)−enhVCjB+k(n)]2 j=0,1 (2)
This equation represents the case where an enhancement bit is calculated for each sample n. Two output values of the quantizer are then possible. We will see subsequently how the possible output values of the quantization step are defined.
This module EAk-3 thus carries out an enhancement quantization Qenhk having as first output the value of the optimal bit Jk to be concatenated with the index of the previous stage IB+k−1 and as second output enhVCJ
The enhancement coding stage finally comprises a module EAk-4 for adding the quantized error signal enh2I
In an equivalent manner, rB+k(n) may be obtained in replacement for EAk-4 by decoding the index IB+k(n), that is to say by calculating [y2I
The signal eB+k(n) which had a value equal to x(n′)−rB+k−1(n′) for n′=n is supplemented according to the following relation for the following sampling instant:
eB+k(n)←eB+k(n)−enh2I
where eB+k(n) is also the memory MA (for “Moving Average”) of the filter. The number of samples to be kept in memory is therefore equal to the number of coefficients of the denominator of the noise shaping filter.
The memory of the AR (for “Auto Regressive”) part of the filtering is then updated according to the following equation:
ewB+k(n)←ewB+k(n)−enh2I
In the case of a filtering by arranging several ARMA cells in cascade, the internal variables of the filters with reference to
qfk(n)←qfk(n)−enh2I
The index n is incremented by one unit. Once the initialization step has been performed for the first ND samples, the calculation of eB+k(n) will be done by shifting the storage memory for eB+k(n) (which involves overwriting the oldest sample) and by inserting the value eB+k(n)=x(n)−rB+k−1(n) into the slot left free.
It may be noted that the invention shown in
Another variant for calculating the target value is to carry out two weighting filterings W(z). The first filtering weights the difference between the input signal and the reconstructed signal of the previous stage rB−k−1(n). The second filter has a zero input but these memories are updated with the aid of enh2I
The principle of the invention described in
It is important to note here that the notation B+k assumes that the bitrate per sample is B+k bits.
With reference to
The decoding device implemented depends on the signal transmission bitrate and for example on the origin of the signal depending on whether it originates from an ISDN network 710 for example or from an IP network 720.
For a transmission channel with low bitrate (48, 56 or 64 kbit/s), it will be possible to use a standard decoder 700 for example of G.722 standardized ADPCM decoder type, to decode a binary train of B+k1 bits with k1=0, 1, 2 and B the number of bits of core bitrate. The restored signal rB+k1(n) arising from this decoding will benefit from enhanced quality by virtue of the enhancement coding stages implemented in the coder.
For a transmission channel with higher bitrate, 80, 96 kbit/s, if the binary train IB+k1+k2(n) has a greater bitrate than the bitrate of the standard decoder 700 and indicated by the mode indicator 740, an extra decoder 730 then performs an inverse quantization of IB+k1+k
A first embodiment of a coder according to the invention is now described with reference to
The core coding stage comprises a module 810 for calculating the signal prediction xPB(n) carried out on the basis of the previous samples of the quantized error signal eQB(n′)=yI
A subtraction module 801 for subtracting the prediction xPB(n) from the input signal x(n) is provided so as to obtain a prediction error signal dPB(n).
The core coder also comprises a module 802 for predicting Pr(z) noise pRBK
An addition module 803 for adding the noise prediction pRBK
A core quantization QB module 820 receives as input the error signal eB(n) so as to give quantization indices IB(n). The optimal quantization index IB(n) and the quantized value yI
By way of example for the G.722 coder, the reconstruction levels of the core quantizer QB are defined by table VI of the article by X. Maitre. “7 kHz audio coding within 64 kbit/s”, IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communication, Vol. 6-2, February 1988.
The quantization index IB(n) of B bits output by the quantization module QB will be multiplexed in the multiplexing module 830 with the enhancement bits J1, . . . , JK before being transmitted via the transmission channel 840 to the decoder such as described with reference to
The core coding stage also comprises a module 805 for calculating the quantization noise, this being the difference between the input of the quantizer and its output qQB(n)=eQB(n)−eB(n), a module 806 for calculating the quantization noise filtered by adding the quantization noise to the prediction of the quantization noise qfBK
The quantizer QB adaptation QAdaptB module 804 gives a level control parameter v(n) also called scale factor for the following instant n+1.
The prediction module 810 comprises an adaptation PAdapt module 811 for adaptation on the basis of the samples of the reconstructed quantized error signal eQB(n) and optionally of the reconstructed quantized error signal eQB(n) filtered by 1+Pz(z).
The module 850 Calc Mask detailed subsequently is designed to provide the filter for shaping the coding noise which may be used both by the core coding stage and the enhancement coding stages, either on the basis of the input signal, or on the basis of the signal decoded locally by the core coding (at the core bitrate), or on the basis of the prediction filter coefficients calculated in the ADPCM coding by a simplified gradient algorithm. In the latter case, the noise shaping filter may be obtained on the basis of coefficients of a prediction filter used for the core bitrate coding, by adding damping constants and adding a de-emphasis filter.
It is also possible to use the masking module in the enhancement stages alone; this alternative is advantageous in the case where the core coding uses few bits per sample, in which case the coding error is not white noise and the signal-to-noise ratio is very low—this situation is found in the ADPCM coding with 2 bits per sample of the high band (4000-8000 Hz) in the G.722 standard, in this case the noise shaping by feedback is not effective.
Note that the noise shaping of the core coding, corresponding to the blocks 802, 803, 805, 806 in
For the sake of simplification, z-transform notation is used here.
In order to obtain a shaping of the noise which can take account, at one and the same time, of the short-term and long-term characteristics of the audiofrequency signals, the filter HM(z) is represented by cascaded ARMA filtering cells 900, 901, 902:
The filtered quantization noise of
Q
f
k(z)=Qfk−1(z)−PNk(z)Qfk−1(z)+PDk(z)Qfk(z) (9)
Iterating with k=1, . . . , KM yields:
i.e.:
Q
f
BK
(z)=QB(z)+PRBK
With the noise prediction PRBK
It is thus readily verified that the shaping of the core coding noise by
E
B(z)=X(z)−XPB(z)+PRBK
Q
B(z)=EQ(z)−EB(z) (14)
R
B(z)=EQ(z)+XPB(z) (15)
Whence:
R
B(z)=X(z)+QfBK
As the quantization noise is nearly white, the spectrum of the perceived coding noise is shaped by the filter
and is therefore less audible.
As described subsequently all ARMA filtering cell may be deduced from an inverse filter for linear prediction of the input signal
by assigning coefficients g1 and g2 in the following manner:
This type of weighting function, comprising a value in the numerator and a value in the denominator, has the advantage through the value in the denominator of taking the signal spikes into account and through the value in the numerator of attenuating these spikes thus affording optimal shaping of the quantization noise. The values of g1 and g2 are such that:
1>g2>g1>0
The particular value g1=0 gives a purely autoregressive masking filter and that of g2=0 gives an MA moving average filter.
Moreover, in the case of voiced signals and that of digital audio signals of high fidelity, a slight shaping on the basis of the fine structure of the signal revealing the periodicities of the signal reduces the quantization noise perceived between the harmonics of the signal. The enhancement is particularly significant in the case of signals with relatively high fundamental frequency or pitch, for example greater than 200 Hz.
A long-term noise shaping ARMA cell is given by:
Returning to the description of
The enhancement coding stage EAk makes it possible to obtain the enhancement bit Jk or a group of bits Jk k=1, GK and is such as described with reference to
This coding stage comprises a module EAk-1 for subtracting from the input signal x(n) the signal rB+k(n) formed of the synthesized signal at stage k rB+k(n) for the sampling instants n−1, . . . , n−ND and of the signal rB+k−1(n) synthesized at stage k−1 for the instant n, so as to give a coding error signal eB+k(n).
A module EAk-2 for filtering eB+k(n) by the weighting function W(z) is also included in the coding stage k. This weighting function is equal to the inverse of the masking filter HM(z) given by the core coding such as previously described. At the output of the module EAk-2, a filtered signal ewB+k(n) is obtained.
The enhancement coding stage k comprises a module EAk-3 for minimizing the error criterion EjB+k for j=0,1 carrying out an enhancement quantization Qenhk having as first output the value of the optimal bit Jk to be concatenated with the index of the previous stage IB+k−1 and as second output enhVCJ
Stage k also comprises an addition module EAk-4 for adding the quantized error signal enh2I
In the case of a single shaping ARMA filter, the filtered error signal is then given in z-transform notation, by:
Thus, for each sampling instant n, a partial reconstructed signal rB+k(n) is calculated on the basis of the signal reconstructed at the previous stage rB+k−1(n) and of the past samples of the signal rB+k(n).
This signal is subtracted from the signal x(n) to give the error signal eB+k(n).
The error signal is filtered by the filter having a filtering ARMA cell W1 to give:
The weighted error criterion amounts to minimizing the quadratic error for the two values (or NG values if several bits) of possible outputs of the quantizer:
E
j
B+k
=[e
w
B+k(n)−enhVCjB+k(n)]2 j=0,1 (22)
This minimization step gives the optimal index Jk and the quantized value for the optimal index enhVCJ
In the case where the masking filter consists of several cascaded ARMA cells, cascaded filterings are performed.
For example, for a cascaded short-term filtering and pitch cell we will have:
The output of the first filtering cell will be equal to:
And that of the second cell:
Once enhvJ
The memories of the filter are thereafter adapted by:
e
1w
B+k(n)=e1wB+k(n)−enhvJ
e
2w
B+k(n)=e2wB+k(n)−enhvJ
The previous procedure is iterated in the general case where
Thus, the enhancement bits are obtained bit by bit or group of bits by group of bits in cascaded enhancement stages.
In contradistinction to the prior art where the core bits of the coder and the enhancement bits are obtained directly by quantizing the error signal e(n) as represented in
Knowing the index IB(n) obtained at the output of the core quantizer and because the quantizer of ADPCM type with B+1 bits is an embedded-codes quantizer, only two output values are possible for the quantizer with B+1 bits.
The same reasoning applies in respect of the output of the enhancement stage with B+k bits as a function of the enhancement stage with B+k−1 bits.
As illustrated in this figure, the embedded quantizer with B+1=5 bits is obtained by splitting into two the levels of the quantizer with B=4 bits. The embedded quantizer with B+2=6 bits is obtained by splitting into two the levels of the quantizer with B+1=5 bits.
In an embodiment of the invention, the values denoting quantization reconstruction levels for an enhancement stage k are defined by the difference between the values denoting the reconstruction levels of the quantization of an embedded quantizer with B+k bits, B denoting the number of bits of the core coding and the values denoting the quantization reconstruction levels of an embedded quantizer with B+k−1 bits, the reconstruction levels of the embedded quantizer with B+k bits being defined by splitting the reconstruction levels of the embedded quantizer with B+k−1 bits into two.
We therefore have the following relation:
y
2I
+j
B+k
=y
I
B+k−1+enh2I
y2I
The possible outputs of the quantizer with B+k bits are given by:
e
Q2I
+j
B+k
=y
I
B+k−1
v(n)+enh2I
v(n) representing the scale factor defined by the core coding so as to adapt the output level of the fixed quantizers.
With the prior art scheme, the quantization for the quantizers with B, B+1, . . . , B+K bits was performed just once by tagging the decision span of the quantizer with B+k bits in which the value e(n) to be quantized lies.
The present invention proposes a different scheme. Knowing the quantized value arising from the quantizer with B+k−1 bits, the quantization of the signal ewB+k(n) at the input of the quantizer is done by minimizing the quantization error and without calling upon the decision thresholds, thereby advantageously making it possible to reduce the calculation noise for a fixed-point implementation of the product enh2I
E
j
B+k=[(ewB+k(n)−yI
Rather than minimizing a quadratic error criterion which will give rise to quantization noise with a flat spectrum as represented with reference to
The spectral weighting function used is W(z), which may also be used for the noise shaping in the core coding stage.
Returning to the description of
r
B(n)=xpB(n)+yI
Because the signal prediction is performed on the basis of the core ADPCM coder, the two reconstructed signals possible at stage k are given as a function of the signal actually reconstructed at stage k−1 by the following equation:
r
j
B+k
=x
P
B(n)+yI
From this is deduced the error criterion to be minimized at stage k:
E
j
B+k
=[x(n)−xPB(n)−yI
i.e.:
E
j
B+k=[(x(n)−rB+k−1(n))−enh2I
Rather than minimizing a quadratic error criterion which will give rise to quantization noise with a flat spectrum as described previously, a weighted quadratic error criterion will be minimized, just as for the core coding, so that the spectrally shaped noise is less audible. The spectral weighting function used is W(z), that already used for the core coding in the example given—it is however possible to use this weighting function in the enhancement stages alone.
In accordance with
enhVPB+k(n′) representing the concatenation of all the values enh2I
and enhVCjB+k(n′) equal to enh2I
The error criterion, which is easier to interpret in the domain of the z-transform, is then given by the following expression:
Where EnhVjB+k(z) is the z-transform of enhVjB+k(n).
By decomposing EnhVjB+k(z), we obtain:
For example, to minimize this criterion, we begin by calculating the signal:
R
P
B+k(z)=RB+k−1(z)+EnhVPB+k(z) (40)
with enhVPB+k(n)=0 since we do not yet know the quantized value. The sum of the signal of the previous stage and of enhVPB+k(n) is equal to the reconstructed signal of stage k.
RPB+k(z), is therefore the z-transform of the signal equal to rB+k(n′) for n′<n and equal to rB+k−1(n′) for n′=n such that:
For implementation on a processor, the signal rB+k(n) will not generally be calculated explicitly, but the error signal eB+k(n) will advantageously be calculated, this being the difference between x(n) and rB+k(n):
eB+k(n) is formed on the basis of rB+k−1(n) and of rB+k(n) and the number of samples to be kept in memory for the filtering which will follow is ND samples, the number of coefficients of the denominator of the masking filter.
The filtered error signal EwB+k(z) will be equal to:
E
w
B+k(z)=EB+k(z)W(z) (42)
The weighted quadratic error criterion is deduced from this:
E
j
B+k
=[e
w
B+k(n)−enhVCjB+k(n)]2 (43)
The optimal index Jk is that which minimizes the criterion EjB+k for j=0,1 thus carrying out the scalar quantization Qenhk on the basis of the two enhancement levels enhVCjB+k(n) j=0,1 calculated on the basis of the reconstruction levels of the scalar quantizer with B+k bits and knowing the optimal core index and the indices Ji i=1, . . . , k−1 or equivalently IB+k−1.
The output value of the quantizer for the optimal index is equal to:
enhVCJ
and the value of the reconstructed signal at the instant n will be given by:
r
B+k(n)=rB+k−1(n)+enh2I
Knowing the quantized output enhVCJ
eB+k(n)←eB+k(n)−enh2I
And the memories of the filter are adapted.
The value of n is incremented by one unit. It is then realized that the calculation of eB+k(n) is extremely simple: it suffices to drop the oldest sample by shifting the storage memory for eB+k(n) by one slot to the left and to insert as most recent sample rB+k−1(n+1), the quantized value not yet being known. The shifting of the memory may be avoided by using the pointers judiciously.
In a first mode of implementation illustrated in
To accentuate the spikes of the spectrum of the masking filter, the signal is pre-processed (pre-emphasis processing) before the calculation at E60 of the correlation coefficients by a filter A1(z) whose coefficient or coefficients are either fixed or adapted by linear prediction as described in patent FR2742568.
In the case where a pre-emphasis is used the signal to be analyzed Sp(n) is calculated by inverse filtering:
S
P(z)=A1(z)S(z).
The signal block is thereafter weighted at E 61 by a Hanning window or a window formed of the concatenation of sub-windows, as known from the prior art.
The Kc2+1 correlation coefficients are thereafter calculated at E62 by:
The coefficients of the AR filter (fir AutoRegressive) A2(Z) which models the envelope of the pre-emphasized signal are given at E63 by the Levinson-Durbin algorithm.
A filter A(z) is therefore obtained at E64, said filter having transfer function
modeling the envelope of the input signal.
When this calculation is implemented for the two filters 1−A1(z) and 1−A2(z) of the coder according to the invention, a shaping filter is thus obtained at E65, given by:
The constants gN1, gD1, gN2 and gD2make it possible to fit the spectrum of the masking filter, especially the first two which adjust the slope of the spectrum of the filter.
A masking filter is thus obtained, formed by cascading two filters where the slope filters and formant filters have been decoupled. This modeling where each filter is adapted as a function of the spectral characteristics of the input signal is particularly adapted to signals exhibiting any type of spectral slope. In the case where gN1 and gN2 are zero, a cascade masking filtering of two autoregressive filters, which suffice as a first approximation, is obtained.
A second exemplary implementation of the masking filter, of low complexity, is illustrated with reference to
The principle here is to use directly the synthesis filter of the ARMA filter for reconstructing the decoded signal with a &accentuation applied by a compensation filter dependent on the slope of the input signal.
The expression for the masking filter is given by:
In the G.722, G.726 and G.727 standards the ADPCM ARMA predictor possesses 2 coefficients in the denominator. In this case the compensation filter calculated at E71 will be of the form:
And the filters Pz(z) and PP(z) given at E70 will be replaced with their version restrained by damping constants gZ1 and gP1 given at E72, to give a noise shaping filter of the form:
By taking:
p
Com(i)=0 i=1,2
a simplified form of the masking filter consisting of an ARMA cell is obtained.
Another very simple form of masking filter is that obtained by taking only the denominator of the ARMA predictor with a slight damping:
with for example gP=0.92.
This AR filter for partial reconstruction of the signal leads to reduced complexity.
In a particular embodiment and to avoid adapting the filters at each sampling instant, it will be possible to freeze the coefficients of the filter to be damped on a signal frame or several times per frame so as to preserve a smoothing effect.
One way of performing the smoothing is to detect abrupt variations in dynamic swing on the signal at the input of the quantizer or in a way which is equivalent but of minimum complexity directly on the indices at the output of the quantizer. Between two abrupt variations of indices is obtained a zone where the spectral characteristics fluctuate less, and therefore with ADPCM coefficients that are better adapted with a view to masking.
The calculation of the coefficients of the cells for long-term shaping of the quantization noise.
is performed on the basis of the input signal of the quantizer which contains a periodic component for the voiced sounds. It may be noted that long-term noise shaping is important if one wishes to obtain a worthwhile enhancement in quality for periodic signals, in particular for voiced speech signals. This is in fact the only way of taking into account the periodicity of periodic signals for coders whose synthesis model does not comprise any long-term predictor.
The pitch period is calculated, for example, by minimizing the long-term quadratic prediction error at the input eB (n) of the quantizer QB of
Pitch is such that:
Cor(Pitch)=Max{Cor(i)}i=PMin, . . . , PMax
The pitch prediction gain Corf(i) used to generate the masking filters is given by:
The coefficients of the long-term masking filter will be given by:
p
2M
(i)=g2pitchCorf(Pitch+i)i=−MP, . . . , MP
And
p
1M
(i)=g1PitchCorf(Pitch+i)i=−MP, . . . , MP
A scheme for reducing the complexity of calculation of the value of the pitch is described by
This embodiment uses prediction modules in place of the filtering modules described with reference to
In this embodiment, the coder of ADPCM type with core quantization noise shaping comprises a prediction module 1505 for predicting the reconstruction noise PD(z)[X(z)−RB(z)], this being the difference between the input signal x(n) and the low bitrate synthesized signal rB(n) and an addition module 1510 for adding the prediction to the input signal x(n).
It also comprises a prediction module 810 for the signal xPB(n) identical to that described with reference to
The core coder also comprises a module PN(z) 1530 for calculating the noise prediction carried out on the basis of the previous samples of the quantization noise qB(n′)n′=n−1, . . . , n−NNH and a subtraction module 1540 for subtracting the prediction thus obtained from the prediction error signal to obtain an error signal denoted eB(n).
A core quantization module QB at 1550 performs a minimization of the quadratic error criterion EjB=[eB(n)−yjB(n)v(n)]2 j=0, . . . , NQ−1 where the values yjB(n) are the reconstructed levels and v(n) the scale factor arising from the quantizer adaptation module 1560. The quantization module receives as input the error signal eB(n) as to give as output quantization indices IB(n) and the quantized signal eQB(n)=yI
The quantization index IB(n) of B bits at the output of the quantization module QB will be multiplexed at 830 with the enhancement bits JI, . . . , Jk before being transmitted via the transmission channel 840 to the decoder such as described with reference to
A module for calculating, the quantization noise 1570 computes the difference between the input of the quantizer and the output of the quantizer qQB(n)=eQB(n)−eB(n).
A module 1580 calculates the reconstructed signal by adding the prediction of the signal to the quantized error rB(n)=eQB(n)+xPB(n).
The adaptation module QAdapt 1560 of the quantizer gives a level control parameter v(n) also called scale factor for the following instant.
An adaptation module PAdapt 811 of the prediction module performs an adaptation on the basis of the past samples of the reconstructed signal rB(n) and of the reconstructed quantized error signal eQB(n).
The enhancement stage EAk comprises a module EAk-10 for subtracting the signal reconstructed at the preceding stage rB+k−1(n) from the input signal x(n) to give the signal dPB+k(n).
The filtering of the signal dPB+k(n) is performed by the filtering module EAk-11 by the filter
to give the filtered signal dPfB+k(n).
A module EAk-12 for calculating a prediction signal PrQB+k(n) is also provided, the calculation being performed on the basis of the quantized previous samples of the quantized error signal eQB+k(n′)n′=n−1, . . . , n−ND and of the samples of this signal filtered by
The enhancement stage EA-k also comprises a subtraction module EA-k13 for subtracting the prediction PrQB+k(n) from the signal dPfB+k(n) to give a target signal ewB+k(n).
The enhancement quantization module EAk-14 QEnhB+k performs a step of minimizing the quadratic error criterion:
E
j
B+k
=[e
w
B+k(n)−enhvjB+k(n)v(n)]2 j=0,1
This module receives as input the signal ewB+k(n) and provides the quantized signal eQB+k(n)=enhvJ
The reconstructed levels of the embedded quantizer with B+k bits are calculated by splitting into two the embedded output levels of the quantizer with B+k−1 bits. Difference values between these reconstructed levels of the embedded. quantizer with B+k bits and those of the quantizer with B+k−1 bits are calculated. The difference values enhvjB+k(n)j=0,1 are thereafter stored once and for all in processor memory and are indexed by the combination of the core quantization index and of the indices of the enhancement quantizers of the previous stages.
These difference values thus constitute a dictionary which is used by the quantization module of stage k to obtain the possible quantization values.
An addition module EAk-15 for adding the signal at the output of the quantizer eQB+k(n) to the prediction PrQB+k(n) is also integrated into enhancement stage k as well as a module EAk-16 for adding the preceding signal to the signal reconstructed at the previous stage rB+k−1(n) to give the reconstructed signal at stage k, rB+k(n).
Just as for the coder described with reference to
Thus, enhancement stage k implements the following steps for a current sample:
obtaining of a difference signal dPB+k(n) by calculating the difference between the input signal x(n) of the hierarchical coding and a reconstructed signal rB+k−1(n) arising from an enhancement coding of a previous enhancement coding stage;
filtering of the difference signal by a predetermined masking filter W(z);
subtraction of the prediction signal PrQB+k(n) from the filtered difference signal dPfB+k(n) to obtain the target signal ewB+k(n):
calculation of the signal at the output of the quantizer filtered by
by adding the signal PrQB+k(n) to the signal eQB+k(n) arising from the quantization step.
calculation of the reconstructed signal rB+k(n) for the current sample by adding the reconstructed signal arising from the enhancement coding of the previous enhancement coding stage and the previous filtered signal.
In the case where the masking filter comprises only one cell of the 1−PD(z) type, that is to say PN(z)=0, the contribution PD(z)EQB+k(z) will be deducted from dPfB+k(n) or better still, the input signal of the quantizer will be given by replacing EAk-11 and EAk-13 by:
E
B+k(z)=DPB+k(z)−PD(z)[DPB+k(z)−EQB+k(z)]
It is understood that the generalization to several cells AR in cascade will be made in accordance with the scheme described by equations 7 to 17 and in
Note that the noise shaping of the core coding, corresponding to the blocks 1610, 1620, 1640 and 1650 in
A module 1620 carries out the addition of the prediction pRBK
A core quantization module QMICB 1630 receives as input the error signal e(n) to give quantization indices IB(n). The optimal quantization index IB (n) and the quantized value eQMICB(n)=yI
By way of example, the reconstruction levels of the core quantizer QMICB of the G.711 standard for B=8 are defined by table 1a for the A-law and table 2a for the μ-law of ITU-T recommendation G.711, “Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) of voice frequencies”.
The quantization index IB(n) of B bits at the output of the quantization module QMICB will be concatenated at 830 with the enhancement bits J1, . . . , JK before being transmitted via the transmission channel 840 to the standard decoder of G.711 type.
A module for calculating the quantization noise 1640, computes the difference between the input of the PCM quantizer and the quantized output qQMICB(n)=eQMICB(n)−eB(n).
A module for calculating the filtered quantization noise 1650 performs the addition of the quantization noise to the prediction of the quantization noise qMICfBK
The enhancement coding consists in enhancing the quality of the decoded signal by successively adding quantization bits while retaining optimal shaping of the reconstruction noise for the intermediate bitrates.
Stage k, making it possible to obtain the enhancement PCM bit Jk or a group of bits Jkk=1,GK, is described by the block EAk.
This enhancement coding stage is similar to that described with reference to
It comprises a subtraction module EAk-1 for subtracting the input signal x(n) from the signal rB+k(n) formed of the signal synthesized at stage k rB+k(n) for the samples n−ND, . . . , n−1 and of the signal synthesized at stage k−1 rB+k−1(n) for the instant n to give a coding error signal eB+k(n).
It also comprises a filtering module EAk-2 for filtering eB+k(n) by the weighting function W(z) equal to the inverse of the masking filter HM(z) to give a filtered signal ewB+k(n).
The quantization module EAk-3 performs a minimization of the error criterion EjB+k for j=0,1 carrying out an enhancement quantization Qenhk having as first output the value of the optimal PCM bit Jk to be concatenated with the PCM index of the previous step IB+k−1 and as second output enhvJ
An addition module EAk-4 for adding the quantized error signal enhvJ
In the same way as that described with reference to
It is possible to envisage other versions of the hierarchical coder, represented in
Similarly, and in another variant, the number of coded samples of the enhancement signal giving the scalar quantization indices (Jk(n)) in the enhancement coding may be less than the number of samples of the input signal. This variant is deduced from the previous variant when the allocated number of enhancement bits is set to zero for certain samples.
An exemplary embodiment of a coder according to the invention is now described with reference to
In hardware terms, a coder such as described according to the first, the second or the third embodiment within the meaning of the invention typically comprises a processor μP cooperating with a memory block BM including a storage and/or work memory, as well as an aforementioned buffer memory MEM in the guise of means for storing for example quantization values of the preceding coding stages or else a dictionary of levels of quantization reconstructions or any other data required for the implementation of the coding method such as described with reference to
The memory block BM can comprise a computer program comprising the code instructions for the implementation of the steps of the method according to the invention when these instructions are executed by a processor μP of the coder and especially a coding with a predetermined bitrate termed the core bitrate, delivering a scalar quantization index for each sample of the current frame and at least one enhancement coding delivering scalar quantization indices for each coded sample of an enhancement signal. This enhancement coding comprises a step of obtaining a filter for shaping the coding noise used to determine a target signal. The indices of scalar quantization of said enhancement signal are determined by minimizing the error between a set of possible values of scalar quantization and said target signal.
More generally, a storage means, readable by a computer or a processor, which may or may not be integrated with the coder, optionally removable, stores a computer program implementing a coding method according to the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0857839 | Nov 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR09/52194 | 11/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 5/16/2011 |