This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. §365 of International Application PCT/EP2013/072821, filed Oct. 31, 2013, which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on May 22, 2014 in English and which claims the benefit of European patent application No. 12306414.9, filed Nov. 14, 2012.
The invention relates to a method and to an apparatus for facilitating making available a sound signal for HOA signals.
Audio signals are recorded with microphones receiving acoustic information from one or more directions. The corresponding audio signals can be pre-listened to in production studios. Some audio signals are matrixed before they reach a mixer unit or during the mixing process. Matrixed audio signals are still ‘normal’ audio signals and can be processed using a mixer unit.
There are two kinds of matrix encodings:
a) Some matrix encodings, like Lt-Rt, are matrixing input signals together and the output is still a signal which can be listened to.
b) Other matrix encodings, like Higher Order Ambisonics HOA, are matrixing input signals together but the output signal is not naturally designed to be listened to.
A problem to be solved by the invention is to process category b) signals such that a sound engineer can get useful information to be listened to without a complete HOA decoding. The present invention relates to methods to solve this problem and apparatuses that utilize these methods.
For enabling a sound engineer to listen to such a matrixed signal, an ‘informative audio signal’ is added at encoding side to the matrixed encoding output. This ‘informative audio signal’ is removed before, or during, the inverse matrixing process at decoding side.
In principle, the inventive encoding method is suited for facilitating the availability at least one sound signal that is combined with a Higher Order Ambisonics signal denoted HOA signal, said method including the steps:
In principle the inventive encoding apparatus is suited for facilitating making available at least one sound signal that is combined with a Higher Order Ambisonics signal denoted HOA signal, said apparatus including:
wherein said apparatus outputs said remaining signal part, said amended selected signal part, and side information data which is suitable for removing at a decoding side said at least one partial signal from said amended selected signal part so as to get said selected signal part, and for merging said remaining signal part and said selected signal part and for decoding said HOA signal.
In principle, the inventive decoding method is suited for decoding an amended HOA signal which was processed according to the above encoding method, said decoding method including the steps:
In principle the inventive decoding apparatus is suited for decoding an amended HOA signal which was processed according to the above encoding method, said apparatus including:
Advantageous additional embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the respective dependent claims.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show in:
A Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) format signal is a matrix encoded signal, consisting of N HOA channels. The input signal from a microphone array is multiplied with a spherical harmonic function, cf. WO 2012/059385 A1, EP 2469741 A1 and EP 2451196 A1.
The first partial signal of order zero shown in
The 2nd to 4th partial signals from the first order (also called ‘X’, ‘Y’, ‘Z’) shown in
The higher orders (an example is shown in
In particular channels related to higher orders can contain only a very small amount of information if there were no sound sources from those directions during the recording. In addition, some frequency filtering can be included in the encoding process, which can further reduce the amount of information in higher order channels.
According to the invention, in order to facilitate checking or identification of such an HOA matrix encoded signal by a sound engineer, at least one of the HOA signals or channels (e.g. ‘X’, ‘Y’ and/or ‘Z’) is extracted from the HOA matrix encoded signal and is added to, or combined with, e.g. the zero order ‘W’ signal, resulting in e.g. W+X, W+Y or W+Z, so that in total still N channels are present.
As an alternative, another signal or signals preferably related to the content of the matrixed audio signal, and known (e.g. by transmission within side information data) to the decoder side, is added or combined to Ambisonics channels like ‘W’, ‘X’, ‘Y’, ‘Z’, . . . , e.g. one or more existing ‘informative’ audio channels like ‘A’, ‘B’, . . . , as level-reduced zero order type signals for the zero order channel and/or as first order type signals for first order channels. This can be a voice saying “this is channel X”, or any other easy-to-listen-to signal. I.e., stored or transmitted is a matrixed audio signal comprising e.g. W+A, X+A, Y+B, . . . , which in total still has N channels.
In addition, side information data are added to the signal to be transmitted or stored, in order to indicate which signal was added in which level to the original HOA signal. The formatting of that side information data is up to the specification of a related system. At least data regarding a transmission channel index and the level or levels of the additional signal or signals and possibly of the matrixed signal as such are transmitted or stored, and in the above alternative, the ‘informative’ audio channel signal or signals ‘A’, ‘B’, . . . .
At receiver or decoding side, prior to the Ambisonics dematrixing or decoding, the additional audio signal or signals, respectively, are subtracted or removed from the received signal using the side information data, in order to get back the true or original Ambisonics channel signals, e.g. W′=W−X, W′=W−Y or W′W−Z.
In the above-described case of additional e.g. ‘A’, ‘B’ signals, in order to get back the true or original Ambisonics channel signals, for example W′=W−A, X′=X−A, Y′=Y−B is performed.
As an alternative, a fixed and well-defined insertion and removal process can be specified for a corresponding system.
In
The amended selected matrixed signal part S+ can be evaluated in a sound engineer listening step or stage SEL. In addition, signal R can be fed to step/stage SEL. Using step/stage SEL, the sound engineer can listen to W+X (or to e.g. W+A in the alternative embodiment), i.e. to signal S+. If, instead of S+=W+X, S+=A+X for example, or if S=X and P=W, step/stage SEL can take W from signal R and make W available to the sound engineer. The advantage is that step/stage SEL needs not carrying out a complete HOA decoding.
At decoding side, based on the received side information data SI, from the remaining matrixed signal part R of the Ambisonics signal the one or more additional Ambisonics channels selected in step/stage 14 at encoder side are extracted in an extracting&mixing step or stage 18, and are removed in a subtractor or remover 15 from the amended selected matrixed signal part S+. The corresponding remaining selected matrixed signal part S and the remaining matrixed signal part R of the Ambisonics signal are merged in a merging step or stage 16, then representing the original HOA signal, and the merged signals are Ambisonics de-matrixed or decoded in an Ambisonics decoding 17, and can be output to a suitable loudspeaker arrangement 19.
In the embodiment where signals like ‘A’, ‘B’ are used as additional signals, these signals are fed via switch SW1 to combiner 13, instead of the output signal from step/stage 14. At decoder side, the signals ‘A’, ‘B’ are fed via switch SW2 to remover 15, instead of the output signal from step/stage 18.
In a further embodiment, the original HOA signal level can be reduced in order to avoid overload after adding another signal. E.g. the peak level of the sum (X+A) should be smaller than the maximum limit.
Instead of zero order signal ‘W’ type, the added signal can be a combination of different-type signals, like the zero order signal ‘W’ plus the first signal ‘X’ from the first order, which would produce a signal coming from the left or the right.
Instead of using a type of one of the HOA partial signals, another signal type known to the decoder could be used, like one of the original microphone signals.
As already mentioned above, instead of a real audio signal some earcons, a brief distinctive sound, or brief announcements like “this is channel X” could be used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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12306414 | Nov 2012 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/072821 | 10/31/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/075934 | 5/22/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4151369 | Gerzon | Apr 1979 | A |
5757927 | Gerzon et al. | May 1998 | A |
20110305344 | Sole | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20130216070 | Keiler | Aug 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2451196 | May 2012 | EP |
WO2012059385 | May 2012 | WO |
EP2469741 | Jun 2012 | WO |
Entry |
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Ellen, R., “Ambisonics: The Surround Alternative”, Third Annual SUrround Conference and Technology Showcase, Dec. 7, 2001, pp. 1-4. |
Search Report Dated Jan. 13, 2014. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160277866 A1 | Sep 2016 | US |