Various aspects of the invention relate to audio signal processing. Aspects of the invention include methods for altering the soundfield in an electroacoustic channel and methods for obtaining a set of filters whose linear combination estimates the impulse response of a time-varying transmission channel. Aspects of the invention also include apparatus for performing such methods and computer programs, stored on a computer-medium, for causing a computer to perform such methods. In particular, aspects of the invention are particularly useful for improving the audibility of portable multimedia and communication devices, particularly by reducing the effect of external environmental noise and/or by improving the understandability of speech in noisy environments. Aspects of the invention are useful generally in any environment for active noise control (ANC) and various types of equalization (including line enhancement and acoustic echo cancellation).
Active noise control (ANC) and adaptive equalization may be used to reduce the effect of external environmental noise and/or to improve the understandability of speech in noisy environments. For example, ANC systems detect the disturbing noise signal and then generate a sound wave of equal amplitude and opposite phase, thereby reducing the perceived disturbance level.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, a method for altering the soundfield in an electroacoustic channel in which a first audio signal is applied by a first electromechanical transducer to an acoustic space, causing changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, and a second audio signal is obtained by a second electromechanical transducer in response to changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, comprises (a) establishing, in response to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the first audio signal, a transfer function estimate of the electroacoustic channel, the transfer function estimate being derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions, the transfer function estimate being adaptive in response to temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, and (b) obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate and filtering with the one or more filters at least a portion of the first audio signal, which portion of the first audio signal may or may not be the same portion as the first recited portion of the first audio signal.
The method may further comprise implementing the transfer function estimate with one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters. The one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate may have a transfer function that is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate. The transfer function estimate may be adaptive in response to a time average of temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel. The one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters may be IIR filters. Alternatively, the one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters may be two filters in cascade, the first filter being an IIR filter and the second filter being an FIR filter. In addition, the one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate may be IIR filters. Alternatively, the one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate may be two filters in cascade, the first filter being an IIR filter and the second filter being an FIR filter.
The transfer function estimate may be derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions by employing an error minimization technique. Alternatively, the transfer function estimate may be established by cross fading from one to another of the one or combination transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions by employing an error minimization technique. Yet as a further alternative, the transfer function may be established by selecting two or more of the transfer functions from the group of transfer functions and forming a weighted linear combination of them based on an error minimization technique.
The characteristics of one or more of the group of transfer functions may include the impulse responses of the electroacoustic channel across a range of variations in impulse responses with time. The impulse responses may be measured impulse responses of real and/or simulated transmission channels.
The characteristics of the group of transfer functions may obtained according to an eigenvector method. For example, the group of transfer functions may be obtained by deriving the eigenvectors of the autocorrelation matrix of the time-invariant filter characteristics. Alternatively, the defined group of time-invariant filter characteristics may be obtained by deriving the eigenvectors resulting from performing a singular value decomposition of a rectangular matrix in which the rows of the matrix are a larger group of time-invariant filter characteristics.
The first electromechanical transducer may be one of a loudspeaker, an earspeaker, a headphone ear piece, and an ear bud.
The second electromechanical transducer is a microphone.
The acoustic space may be a small acoustic space at least partially bounded by an over-the-ear or an around-the-ear cup, the degree to which the small acoustic space is enclosed being dependant on the closeness and centering of the ear cup with respect to the ear. Variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel may result from changes in the location of the small acoustical space with respect to the ear.
Each estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel may be an estimate of the channel's magnitude response within a range of frequencies.
The acoustic space may also receive an audio disturbance signal.
The acoustic space may also receive an audio disturbance and the first audio signal may include (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying the first audio signal to the filter based on the estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, the difference being filtered by the one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal.
Aspects of the invention may provide an active noise canceller in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel reduces or cancels the audio disturbance.
The first audio signal may include an audio input signal filtered by a target response filter and by the one or more filters.
Aspects of the invention may provide an equalizer in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel emulates the response of the target response filter.
The acoustic space may also receive an audio disturbance and the first audio signal may include (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying the first audio signal to the estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, the difference being filtered by the one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal filtered by a target response filter and also filtered by the one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate.
Aspects of the invention may provide an active noise canceller in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel reduces or cancels the audio disturbance and also provides an equalizer in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel emulates the response of a target response filter. The target response filter may have a flat response, in which case the filter may be omitted. Alternatively, the target response filter has a diffuse field response or the target response filter characteristic may be user-specified.
The one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate may comprise a lower-frequency IIR filter and an upper-frequency FIR filter in cascade.
The first audio signal comprises an artificial signal selected to be inaudible.
The establishing may respond to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the second audio signal as digital audio signals in the frequency domain.
According to another aspect of the invention, a method for altering the soundfield in an electroacoustic channel in which a first audio signal is applied by a first electromechanical transducer to an acoustic space, causing changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, and a second audio signal is obtained by a second electromechanical transducer in response to changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, comprises (a) establishing, in response to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the first audio signal, a transfer function estimate of the electroacoustic channel for a range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies, the transfer function estimate being derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions, the transfer function estimate being adaptive in response to temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, (b) obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is based on the transfer function estimate and filtering with the one or more filters at least a portion of the first audio signal, which portion of the first audio signal may or may not be the same portion as the first recited portion of the first audio signal, and (c) obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process.
This aspect of the invention may further comprise implementing the transfer function estimate for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies with one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters.
The one or more filters whose transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies may be based on the transfer function estimate have a transfer function that is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate for the range of frequencies.
The gradient descent minimization process may be responsive to the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying at least a portion of the first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies.
The filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies may be one or more IIR filters and the filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies may be one or more FIR filters.
The acoustic space may also receive an audio disturbance and the first audio signal may include (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying the first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies, the difference being filtered by a series arrangement of (a) the one or more filters whose transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate and (b) one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal.
Alternatively, the acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance and the first audio signal may include (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying the first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies, the difference being filtered by a series arrangement of (a) the one or more filters whose transfer function for the range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate and (b) one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than the lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal filtered by a target response filter and also filtered by the series arrangement of filters.
According to a further aspect of the invention, a method for obtaining a set of filters whose linear combination estimates the impulse response of a time-varying transmission channel, comprises (a) obtaining M filter observations, the observations including the impulse responses of the transmission channel across its range of possible variations with time, (b) selecting N of M filters according to an eigenvector method, and (c) determining, in real-time, a linear combination of the N filters that forms an optimal estimate of the transmission channel.
The N selected filters may be determined by deriving the eigenvectors of the autocorrelation matrix of the M observations. Alternatively, the N selected filters may be determined by deriving the eigenvectors resulting from performing a Singular Value Decomposition of a rectangular matrix in which the rows of the matrix are the M observations.
A scaling factor for each of the N eigenvector filters may be obtained using a gradient-descent optimization.
The gradient-descent optimization may employ an LMS algorithm.
The M observations may be measured impulse responses of real or simulated transmission channels.
Aspects of the invention may improve the listening experience under typical (non-ideal) conditions of electroacoustic channels and their environment. An “electroacoustic channel” may be defined as an acoustic space relative to an ear in which an electromechanical transducer, such as a loudspeaker or earspeaker, causes changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, the electroacoustic channel thus including the electromechanical transducer and the acoustic space between that transducer and a listener's ear drum. In some applications such an electroacoustic channel may be bounded at least in part by a flexible or rigid ear cup. In various exemplary embodiments of the invention, a further electromechanical transducer, such as a microphone, is suitably located within the acoustic space in order to sense changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, thereby allowing the derivation of an estimate of the electroacoustic channel response.
According to aspects of the invention, an ANC and/or equalizer may adapt itself in response to short-time variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel. The effect of this adaptation is to expand the listening “sweet spot”. A sweet spot is the region in which the playback device may be physically located while still achieving effective results. Example embodiments of the invention provide both ANC and equalization separately or together—equalization may be added to ANC with negligible increase in implementation cost.
Aspects of the invention are applicable, for example, at least to acoustic environments characterized by high compliance transducers and relatively few, widely spaced transducer resonances. The transducer, when modeled as a linear filter, should result in the model being or approximating a minimum-phase filter. The requirement for minimum-phase transducers may be applied to a limited frequency range because ANC is generally most effective for noise signals below 1.5 kHz. ANC is particularly well suited for deployment in portable multimedia devices such as earbuds, Bluetooth headsets, portable headphones, and mobile phones, where voice communication and music playback commonly occur under conditions of highly dynamic environmental noise. Furthermore, the electroacoustic channels involved may be small (for example, mobile phone pressed against the pinna, earbuds inserted directly into the ear canal, and partially or fully-sealed headphones), implying that the acoustic resonant frequencies are further apart and variable channel resonances can be more readily accounted for in the system. Such properties may be exploited in aspects of the present invention to simplify the design of adaptive “earspeaker” systems (sound reproduction devices that are located in close proximity to a listener's ears).
Aspects of the invention address a leading cause of low performance in earspeakers—variability in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel from the loudspeaker to the ear canal. Mobile phone users experience this phenomenon while listening to a far-end talker and, often unconsciously, “optimize” the channel by making minute adjustments to the position and angle of the phone relative to the ear. Even when sealed headphones are used, the transfer function varies depending on the quality of the acoustic seal between the earcup and the head, the position of the earcup, and specific attributes of the listener such as pinna size and shape and whether the listener is wearing eyeglasses. In an aircraft passenger environment, in which the listener is using a non-adaptive, sealed headphone, an air gap as small as 1 mm may result in a reduction of up to 11 dB of low-frequency cancellation of aircraft engine noise.
Some digital implementations of aspects of the present invention employ, adaptively, one or a linear combination of a plurality of time-invariant IIR (infinite impulse response) filters. Such an arrangement is useful, for example, in rapidly tracking changes in the electroacoustic channel.
The present invention and its various aspects may involve analog or digital signals, as noted. In the digital domain, devices and processes operate on digital signal streams in which audio signals are represented by samples.
It is well known that the low frequency response of an earspeaker, such as a headphone, is attenuated as it is pulled away from the ear. Likewise, if the headphone is not in the optimal position, an air gap (acoustic leakage) may form around the headphone, and thus the low frequency response may also lowered by an amount proportional to the degree of acoustic leakage. The inventors have observed that this change in the frequency response as a function of acoustic leakage is limited to frequencies below a particular frequency value, wherein this value may be different for different earspeakers. The variation in magnitude frequency response above this frequency value may be assumed to vary less as a function of headphone leakage. The variation of the magnitude frequency response may be as much as about 15 dB at very low frequencies (about 100 Hz).
When there is a small acoustic space between an earspeaker and the ear canal, typical room reflections are not a factor in the measurements. One may assume that room acoustics do not affect such an electroacoustic channel. This simplification yields a channel that is, over a nominal frequency range, substantially minimum phase with the exception of a delay, and that has a magnitude frequency response that is invertible over a bandlimited range. The last simplification band limits the range of the electroacoustic model to a frequency range that yields minimal or shallow notches in the magnitude response so as to prevent resonant peaks that is annoying to the listener or would create potential instabilities in operation.
Frequencies below about 1.5 kHz may be ideal for electroacoustic channel system identification. One reason is that in modern analog or digital broadband noise-canceling systems (as opposed to systems that cancel periodic disturbances), the frequency range that benefits the greatest from ANC are those frequencies below 1.5 kHz. This is because the passive isolation on typical earspeakers are less effective at isolating frequencies with wavelengths longer than ⅓rd of a meter, than they are for shorter wavelengths. Also, because waveforms with wavelengths greater than ⅓rd of a meter are less affected by system latencies in the hardware, it is desirable that one should focus system identification over the range of frequencies that are most important to relevant and effective noise cancellation. Because it varies continuously across a range of magnitude responses, an electroacoustic channel may be modeled as a linear, continuously time-varying filter.
An ANC processor or processing method, such as shown in the example of
In accordance with aspects of the invention, an estimate of the plant model G may be implemented as one or more filters or filter functions, and is shown as a plant estimating function or device (“Plant Estimate Filtering, G′”). A feedback signal is obtained by subtracting the output g of the plant model estimate G′ from the output e of the plant model G in a subtractive combiner or combining function 6. If the Plant Estimate Filtering G′ is ideal in its estimation of the model of the electroacoustic channel, i.e., G′=G, then the feedback path signal x from subtractor 6 is equal to the disturbance signal d. A path containing Plant Estimate Filtering G′ is often referred to in the literature as the secondary path. The feedback path signal x is applied to one or more filters or filtering functions (“Control Filtering, W”), the filtering characteristics of which, in one exemplary embodiment of the invention, are substantially the inverse of the Plant Estimate Filtering G′, to produce a disturbance-canceling antiphase signal x′ that is summed in an additive combiner or combining function 10 with an input speech and/or music audio signal for application to the earspeaker 2.
Regarding notation, G, G′ and W are the z-domain transfer functions for digital systems, or the S-domain transfer function for analog systems. The disturbance signal d and microphone signal e are equivalent time domain representations of D (see below) and E (see below), respectively.
An adaptive analyzer or adaptive analysis function (“Adaptive Analysis”) 12 receives the speech and/or music audio signal directly as one input and the microphone 4 signal as another input. Ideally, one would like for the right-hand (“Microphone”) input to the Adaptive Analysis 12 to be an acoustic-space-processed version of its left-hand (“Signal”) input so that the Adaptive Analysis 12 input signals differ only by the condition of the plant G (this avoids a bias in obtaining the plant estimate G′ filtering). For example, that may be accomplished by providing a path parallel to Adaptive Analysis 12 having another instance, a copy, of the plant estimating function or device (“Copy of Plant Estimate Filtering, G”) and adding its output “V” in an additive combiner 14 to the output of combiner 6. Thus, the secondary path G′ output subtracts from the V path G′ output, effectively leaving the microphone output of the acoustic space as the input to the right hand side of the Analysis.
In one exemplary embodiment of the invention, the left-hand Signal Input of the Adaptive Analysis 12 represents a known signal, while the right-hand Microphone Input ideally contains only the known signal processed by the plant. The Microphone signal e contains the music signal filtered by the unknown plant G. However, environmental noise is acquired by the microphone in addition to sound from the earspeaker. The environmental noise is considered to be measurement noise from the point of view of performing system identification on the plant. The Adaptive Analysis 12 selects a filter that best models the current state of the plant. Because the measurement noise is typically uncorrelated with the speech/music signal in Adaptive Analysis 12, it does not effect the optimal filter selection.
Alternate means for generating the left-hand and right-hand inputs of Adaptive Analysis 12 are possible without departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, the left-hand input signal can be derived from the plant input signal, and the right-hand signal can be derived from an estimate of the acoustic-space-processed music signal (the Microphone signal e).
As described further below, the Adaptive Analysis 12 generates filtering parameters that, when applied to the Plant Estimate Filtering, G′ and the Copy of Plant Estimate Filtering, G′, result in one or more filters, respectively, that estimate the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel G. The transfer function estimate G′ may be implemented by one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters, the transfer function estimate G′ being adaptive in response to variations in the transfer function G of the electroacoustic channel. As explained below, Adaptive Analysis 12 may have one of several modes of operation. There is a mapping from the filter characteristics determined by Adaptive Analysis 12 and the filterings G′ and W.
The arrangement of the
From the above equation, one may observe that if G′≠G (indicating that the estimate of the plant G is imperfect), then the denominator is less than one and H is larger than for an ideal plant estimate. For the ideal case in which H is set to zero, one may solve for W (assuming that G′=G), and obtain an optimal control filter W:
The plant estimate G′ may be modeled as a minimum phase filter in cascade with a delay. In practice, the delay is approximately 3 to 4 samples at a sampling frequency of 48 kHz due to acoustic and speaker excitation latencies associated with G. But this delay may be factored out when measuring G and the resultant filter, by design, represents a transducer that is minimum phase. The above also demonstrates that adapting the system based on changes in the plant also optimizes the control filter W. In this case, W is optimal with respect to plant variation.
Inverse filtering characteristics are obtained in any suitable way by a filter inverting device or function (“Inversion”) 16. For example, Inversion 16 may calculate the inversion (particularly if the filtering is a single filter), employ a lookup table, or determine the inversion in a side process or off-line by, for example, a gradient-descent method. An example of such an out-of-circuit method is described below in connection with the example of
As noted above, a music or speech signal is summed with the antiphase signal at the output of Control Filtering, W. The speech/music signal is removed from the feedback path by the G′ path, leaving only the disturbance as a component in the antiphase signal. The effectiveness of such signal removal is dependent on the closeness of the match between G and G′.
Aspects of the present invention also envision the adaptive pre-filtering of audio signals to compensate for physical attributes of an electroacoustic channel—in other words, to provide equalization. As with ANC, a primary contributor to the magnitude response of the electroacoustic channel is imparted by the earspeaker. Because the electroacoustic channel driver affects the magnitude response of the electroacoustic channel, a pre-filter allows the desired audio signal to compensate, within reasonable distortion limits, characteristics of the electroacoustic channel. Also, in an equalizer configuration, a desired magnitude response may be imparted upon the resultant acoustic presentation at the ear based on, for example: (1) simulation of the diffuse field response such as that described in ISO 454 (see reference 13, above), (2) user-specified equalization settings, or (3) a flat magnitude response. A diffuse field response imparts a head shadowing effect to coarsely simulate the experience of listening to music in a room. A flat response may be desirable for certain types of recordings such as binaural recordings where the spatial presentation has a priori been applied to the content under audition. The desired response of the electroacoustic channel may be specified according to a usage model, and need not have a flat magnitude response. The desired response may be static (time-invariant) or dynamic (time-variant).
It is desired that the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel G approximate as closely as possible the response of the target response filter S. The optimal equalizer may be characterized as the ratio of the desired response to that of the electroacoustic channel response:
Thus, if W is the inverse of G, the perceived output heard through the series combination of the S, W and G transfer characteristics is the S characteristic. S should be limited according to the capabilities of the audio playback system to avoid distortion and non-linearities when the earspeaker is in a non-optimal position (which may require an alteration in bass response).
The ANC/EQ example of
A requirement of processors or processing methods in accordance with the examples of
An example of an injection of a signal is shown with respect to an arbitrary magnitude versus frequency response in
The processor or processing method examples of
The processor or processing method example of
Likewise, for the secondary path filter:
In this example, the lower-frequency filter may be a low-order IIR filter, while the upper frequency may be implemented as either an FIR or IIR filter of appropriate length to model the higher-frequency features of the earspeaker. Other exemplary embodiments are possible with varying combinations of filter-types (FIR or IIR), adaptive versus static, number of filter stages, or even parallel rather than series configurations. Because the product of W·G may be constrained to be open-loop stable through an offline design of W, then the product of WIIR·WUF·G is also stable. The length of the adaptive filter N for WUF may be reduced because WLF is canceling frequencies with wavelengths longer than N. A short N improves the response of the system because the N is directly proportional to the convergence time.
The upper-frequency filters GUF and WUF may be static or adaptive. If adaptive, they may switch between optimal filter coefficients based on the system identification from the Adaptive Analysis 12. Alternatively, they may be independently adaptive, entirely separate from the Adaptive Analysis, whereby a gradient-descent algorithm such as the LMS may be employed to converge to optimal upper-frequency filter coefficients. Either or both the control and the secondary path upper-frequency filters, GUF and/or WUF, may be adaptive.
The employment of Factored filters is also applicable to the frequency-domain example of
w(n+1)=w(n)+μx(n)e(n) n=0 . . . N−1 (7)
where w is the FIR filter coefficient vector, N is the length of the control filter WUF, and x is a vectorized input array read from the feedback path and filtered by the plant model G′. The x vector is updated by first shifting all stored values one index value back in time, and then storing the new x sample at index=0. e is the current (scalar) sample read from the microphone. μ is the step size that is chosen to best balance stability against convergence speed.
Comparing the example of
Thus, the example of
The Adaptive Analysis 12 may operate by reference to a bank of parallel filters that represent G′ for different physical variations of the plant. Each of these filters may represent, for example, a unique physical positioning of a headphone earpiece on a dummy head that may be used for measuring the impulse response of G in a particular position. Because the parallel filters only need to modify the signal at low frequencies, and because the response of electroacoustic channels varies relatively slowly across frequency, they may be implemented at very low computational cost using low to moderate-order filters. For a digital implementation, the mean-squared error between the output of each of the filters and the microphone error signal may be used to identify which of the filters best matches the plant G. For an analog implementation, comparators and logic circuitry may be used to select an optimal filter, as is described further below in connection with
In the course of implementing an ANC system such as in any of the examples above, a designer may quantify the impulse response of the acoustic path at different headphone positions in order to determine limits imposable upon the adaptive algorithm during real-time operation. Because this quantification may be conducted for a known earspeaker electroacoustic path, the electroacoustic parameters of the path may be fully specified before measurement.
In this example, one filter out of a possible N is selected based on a minimum mean-square error criterion. The N filters are connected in a parallel arrangement, producing in a bank of filters or filtering functions (“N Parallel Filters”) 24 in which each filter processes the same bandpassed version of the Input Signal. A controller or controlling function (“Control”) 26 selects the kth filter, depending on which of the N filters returns the minimum time-averaged mean-squared error. Adaptive Analysis 12 receives an Input Signal (corresponding to the left-hand input to Analysis 12 in
Averaging may be implemented using a simple pole-zero smoothing filter. A 3 dB time constant of 70 msec (milliseconds) (fs=50 kHz) has been found useful. To change from one filter selection to another, only the filter coefficients and not the filter states need to be changed. The change may be applied as an instantaneous switch from one set of coefficients to the next. In order to minimize audible artifacts incurred during the switching, the change, with respect to pole and zero values, should be small. For the K=1 case, as in this
It is possible to crossfade from one set of filter coefficients for G′ to another nearby set (in terms of the relative distance between the poles and zeros). This can be accomplished by replacing the old coefficients with new ones incrementally over time, or by allowing K=2 for an interval of time and computing the overall output as the time-varying weighted sum of both (one filter having the old set of coefficients and the other having the new set). Provided the cross-fade time is reasonably short (less than 100 msec, for example), in practice it is still possible to achieve reasonably correct system identification during such crossfading. In this case, when crossfading G′ from a first set of coefficients to a nearby second set of filter coefficients, the corresponding coefficients for W may either be read from memory if the coefficients were computed offline, or computed directly as the inverse of G′.
When K>1, the Plant Estimate Filtering in the various exemplary embodiments may be implemented by a bank of K parallel filters or filtering functions, each having a weighting coefficient. In accordance with aspects of the present invention, the filters or filtering functions controlled by the K filter parameters and K weighting parameters provided by the Analysis 12 may be IIR, FIR, or a combination of IIR and FIR filters.
One possible application of multiple filters K is to enhance crossfading from one filter to an adjacent filter (in terms of poles and zeros). As mentioned above, outputs of the K filters are mixed together using weighting coefficients produced by the Control 26. During the time interval of a crossfade, K=2; otherwise, K=1. This method may reduce audible artifacts caused by switching between two different filters in the method described earlier (when K=1).
A computationally-efficient variation on the multiple-filter method is to restrict the search to a subset of the total number of filters M. This is accomplished by assigning filter indices so that filters with similar transfer functions have indices that are adjacent to each other, and then restricting the search to the N filters neighboring the current filter having minimum mean-square error. Tracking is enabled in the Control 26 by monitoring the averaged relative mean-square error of the filter with the middle index compared to its neighbors. If, over time, the minimum error begins to move toward one of the endpoints of the set of N filters until finally a new minimum is detected, the indices of all N filters are adjusted so that the filter with the middle index continues to have the minimum mean-square error out of the set of N filters.
Another alternative of the Adaptive Analysis 12 is for it to operate in the frequency domain rather than the time domain as in the example of
Another variation on the multiple-filter linear-combination method, is for K=N and to select the N out of M filters according to an eigenvector method such that a linear combination of the N filters forms an optimal energy-minimizing filter. According to such an eigenvector filter method, the N selected filters are computed offline for a given set of M observations. The N-of-M Selection is not implemented in real-time because the N filters have already been computed off-line. The N selected filters are the eigenvectors of the autocorrelation matrix of the M observations. Alternatively, the M observations form the rows of a rectangular matrix and a Singular Value Decomposition of this rectangular matrix yield the eigenvector filters. The Control 26 then computes weighting coefficients for each of the N eigenvector filters, for example, using a gradient-descent minimization process, such as an LMS algorithm. Because all N filters are used to compute the optimal filtered output, K=N. Thus for any given electroacoustic channel impulse response, the response may be mapped to nearest principal components constructed from the N eigenvectors. Such an eigenvector filter method has the advantage that for a large value of M, (i.e., a large number of observations), a smaller number of fixed filters N may be linearly combined to form an optimal energy-minimizing filter. A derivation of the method for generating the eigenvector filters is presented below under the heading “Derivation of the Eigenvector Filter Design Process.”
The Inversion device or function 16 in the examples of
Referring to the example of
The output of microphone 4 is applied to a bandpass filter 30, followed, in series, by an averager or averaging function (“Mic Avg”) 40. The Mic Avg 24 output is applied to an input of each of three comparators or comparator functions C1, C2 and C3. The speech/music input audio signal is applied to a static filter or filtering function (“Static Filter”) 42, followed, in series, by a bandpass filter 24 and an averager or averaging function (“Audio Avg”) 44. The Audio Avg 44 output is applied to an input of each of three comparators or comparator functions C1, C2 and C3. The Bandpass Filters 24 and 30 isolate a narrow band of frequencies at which the average reproduced level at low frequencies is compared with the average level in the audio program. Comparators C1, C2, and C3 have different offsets in order to give different thresholds for the decision as to which filter (1, 2, 3, 4) should be selected. The comparators may be implemented with hysteresis in order to eliminate jittering between the outputs of the various filters. Control 26 selects the filter 20 having the least squared error.
Other than employing an analog or partially analog implementation, another way to reduce latency is to implement the feedback path in the example of
In the analog example of
Another alternative example that embodies aspects of the present invention is a hybrid digital/analog exemplary embodiment in which the Adaptive Analysis 12 operates on digital samples of both the speech/music signal and the microphone signal, but then applies analog filter parameters (shown as Filter 1 through Filter 4 in the example of
In order to derive a set of eigenvector filters for use in the eigenvector alternative mentioned above, one needs to compute K (or N, K=N) eigenvector filters based on a set of M observations. Calculation of eigenvector filters C may occur off-line. The eigenvector filter coefficients may be stored in a suitable non-volatile computer memory.
One may start from a general case in which the filter to be modeled is characterized by a random filter
having random real coefficients p=(p0, . . . , pL−1)T. The objective is to find a set of N base filters
with real coefficients ci=(ci,0, . . . , ci,L−1)T, such that
is minimized. In equation 8, E{□} is the statistical expectation with respect to the distribution of the random coefficients of p,
∥v∥□vTv, C□(c1, . . . ,cN)T,
and w□(w1, . . . , wN)T is a real vector that minimizes ∥p−CTw∥ for given p and C. Without lost of generality one may further assume ci are orthonormal vectors, i.e.,
Because
∥p−CTw∥=pTp+wTCCTw−2pTCTw.
Recognizing that CCT=I, partially differentiating the above expression with respect to w, and setting the derivative to zero, one has w=Cp.
Replace the above into (1) one has
where
R□E{ppT}.
Clearly, the coefficient vectors ci, i=1, . . . , N that minimizes J also maximizes
which turn out to be the N eigenvectors corresponding to the N largest eigenvalues of the covariance matrix R. That is:
Rci=λici, i=1, . . . ,N,
and λi, i=1, . . . , N are the N largest scalars that satisfy the above equations.
A more generalized solution can be obtained by adding a frequency weighting function W(ω) to the cost function J(C), which can be quite useful in practical applications.
Consider a more specific case in which the filter to be modeled is from M observed plant filters
Noting that in this case one is trying to model a random filter of M equally probable filters Gi(z) for which the covariance matrix is given by:
where gi=(gi(0), gi(1), . . . , gi(L−1))T, the coefficients of the N base filters C1(z), . . . , CN(z) are thus given by the eigenvector ci corresponding to the N largest eigenvalues λi of the covariance matrix R.
The actual number of the base filter N can be decided either by complexity constraints, or quality constraints, e.g., the sum of the remaining eigenvalues satisfies
where ε is a pre-determined maximum design tolerance.
In practice, it is also possible to use IIR filters that have frequency responses that approximate those of the Eigenvector filters as the N base filters for further complexity reduction. The IIR base filters can be designed from C1(z), . . . , CN(z) by using, e.g., a suitable error minimizing process such as a least-square-fit algorithm.
Once the N base filters have been computed, the optimal weighting w that provides the least square fit for a given unknown electroacoustic channel may be obtained by using a gradient-descent minimization process such as an LMS algorithm. An example is shown in
e(n)=x(n)−wT(n)u(n),
where u(n)□(u1(n), . . . , uN(n))T are the respective outputs of the N base filters. The filter weightings w(n) are updated as: w(n+1)=w(n)+μw(n)e(n).
The invention may be implemented in hardware or software, or a combination of both (e.g., programmable logic arrays). Unless otherwise specified, algorithms and processes included as part of the invention are not inherently related to any particular computer or other apparatus. In particular, various general-purpose machines may be used with programs written in accordance with the teachings herein, or it may be more convenient to construct more specialized apparatus (e.g., integrated circuits) to perform the required method steps. Thus, the invention may be implemented in one or more computer programs executing on one or more programmable computer systems each comprising at least one processor, at least one data storage system (including volatile and non-volatile memory and/or storage elements), at least one input device or port, and at least one output device or port. Program code is applied to input data to perform the functions described herein and generate output information. The output information is applied to one or more output devices, in known fashion.
Each such program may be implemented in any desired computer language (including machine, assembly, or high level procedural, logical, or object oriented programming languages) to communicate with a computer system. In any case, the language may be a compiled or interpreted language.
Each such computer program may be stored on or downloaded to a storage media or device (e.g., solid state memory or media, or magnetic or optical media) readable by a general or special purpose programmable computer, for configuring and operating the computer when the storage media or device is read by the computer system to perform the procedures described herein. The inventive system may also be considered to be implemented as a computer-readable storage medium, configured with a computer program, where the storage medium so configured causes a computer system to operate in a specific and predefined manner to perform the functions described herein.
An embodiment of the present invention may relate to one or more of the example embodiments enumerated below.
1. A method for altering the soundfield in an electroacoustic channel in which a first audio signal is applied by a first electromechanical transducer to an acoustic space, causing changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, and a second audio signal is obtained by a second electromechanical transducer in response to changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, comprising: establishing, in response to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the first audio signal, a transfer function estimate of the electroacoustic channel, said transfer function estimate being derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions, said transfer function estimate being adaptive in response to temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, and obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate and filtering with the one or more filters at least a portion of the first audio signal, which portion of the first audio signal may or may not be the same portion as said first recited portion of the first audio signal.
2. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 1 further comprising implementing said transfer function estimate with one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters.
3. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 1 or enumerated example embodiment 2 wherein said one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate have a transfer function that is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate.
4. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-3 wherein the transfer function estimate is adaptive in response to a time average of temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel.
5. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 3 or enumerated example embodiment 4 as dependent on enumerated example embodiment 2 wherein said one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters are IIR filters.
6. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 3 or enumerated example embodiment 4 as dependent on enumerated example embodiment 2 wherein said one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters are two filters in cascade, the first filter being an IIR filter and the second filter being an FIR filter.
7. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-6 wherein said one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate are IIR filters.
8. A method according to any of enumerated example embodiments 1-6 wherein said one or more filters whose transfer function is based on the transfer function estimate are two filters in cascade, the first filter being an IIR filter and the second filter being an FIR filter.
9. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-8 wherein said transfer function estimate is derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions by employing an error minimization technique.
10. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-8 wherein said transfer function estimate is established by cross fading from one to another of said one or combination transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions by employing an error minimization technique.
11. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-8 wherein said transfer function is established by selecting two or more of said transfer functions from said group of transfer functions and forming a weighted linear combination of them based on an error minimization technique.
12. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-11 wherein the characteristics of one or more of the group of transfer functions includes the impulse responses of the electroacoustic channel across a range of variations in impulse responses with time.
13. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 12 wherein the impulse responses are measured impulse responses of real and/or simulated transmission channels.
14. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 12 wherein the characteristics of said group of transfer functions are obtained according to an eigenvector method.
15. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 14 wherein the group of transfer functions are obtained by deriving the eigenvectors of the autocorrelation matrix of the time-invariant filter characteristics.
16. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 14 wherein the defined group of time-invariant filter characteristics are obtained by deriving the eigenvectors resulting from performing a singular value decomposition of a rectangular matrix in which the rows of the matrix are a larger group of time-invariant filter characteristics.
17. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-16 wherein said first electromechanical transducer is one of a loudspeaker, an earspeaker, a headphone ear piece, and an ear bud.
18. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-17 wherein said second electromechanical transducer is a microphone.
19. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-18 wherein said acoustic space is a small acoustic space at least partially bounded by an over-the-ear or an around-the-ear cup, the degree to which the small acoustic space is enclosed being dependant on the closeness and centering of the ear cup with respect to the ear.
20. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 19 wherein said variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel result from changes in the location of the small acoustical space with respect to said ear.
21. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-20 wherein each estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel is an estimate of the channel's magnitude response within a range of frequencies.
22. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-21 wherein said acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance signal.
23. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-21 wherein said acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance and said first audio signal includes (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying said first audio signal to the filter based on the estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, said difference being filtered by said one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal.
24. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 23 wherein the method provides an active noise canceller in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel reduces or cancels the audio disturbance.
25. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-21 wherein said first audio signal includes an audio input signal filtered by a target response filter and by said one or more filters.
26. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 25 wherein the method provides an equalizer in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel emulates the response of the target response filter.
27. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-21 wherein said acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance and said first audio signal includes (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying said first audio signal to the estimate of the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel, said difference being filtered by said one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal filtered by a target response filter and also filtered by said one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate.
28. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 27 wherein the method provides an active noise canceller in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel reduces or cancels the audio disturbance and also provides an equalizer in which the perceived audio response of the electroacoustic channel emulates the response of the target response filter.
29. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 26 or enumerated example embodiment 28 in which the target response filter has a flat response, whereby the filter may be omitted.
30. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 26 or enumerated example embodiment 28 in which the target response filter has a diffuse field response.
31. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 26 or enumerated example embodiment 28 in which the target response filter characteristic is user-specified.
32. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 23 or enumerated example embodiment 27 wherein said one or more filters whose transfer function is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate comprise a lower-frequency IIR filter and an upper-frequency FIR filter in cascade.
33. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-21 wherein said first audio signal comprises an artificial signal selected to be inaudible.
34. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-32 wherein said establishing responds to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the second audio signal as digital audio signals in the frequency domain.
35. A method for altering the soundfield in an electroacoustic channel in which a first audio signal is applied by a first electromechanical transducer to an acoustic space, causing changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, and a second audio signal is obtained by a second electromechanical transducer in response to changes in air pressure in the acoustic space, comprising
establishing, in response to the second audio signal and at least a portion of the first audio signal, a transfer function estimate of the electroacoustic channel for a range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies, said transfer function estimate being derived from one or a combination of transfer functions selected from a group of transfer functions, said transfer function estimate being adaptive in response to temporal variations in the transfer function of the electroacoustic channel,
obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is based on the transfer function estimate and filtering with the one or more filters at least a portion of the first audio signal, which portion of the first audio signal may or may not be the same portion as said first recited portion of the first audio signal, and
obtaining one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process.
36. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 35 further comprising implementing said transfer function estimate for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies with one or more of a plurality of time-invariant filters.
37. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 35 or 36 wherein said one or more filters whose transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is based on the transfer function estimate have a transfer function that is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate for said range of frequencies.
38. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 35 wherein the gradient descent minimization process is responsive to the difference between said second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying at least a portion of said first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies.
39. A method according to enumerated example embodiment 38 wherein the filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is or are IIR filters and the filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies is or are FIR filters.
40. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-3 wherein said acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance and said first audio signal includes (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying said first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies, said difference being filtered by a series arrangement of (a) said one or more filters whose transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate and (b) one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal.
41. A method according to any one of enumerated example embodiments 35-39 wherein said acoustic space also receives an audio disturbance and said first audio signal includes (1) an error feedback signal derived from the difference between the second audio signal and an audio signal obtained by applying said first audio signal to the series arrangement of (a) a filter or filters estimating the electroacoustic channel transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies and (b) a filter or filters having a time-invariant transfer response for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies, said difference being filtered by a series arrangement of (a) said one or more filters whose transfer function for said range of audio frequencies lower than an upper range of audio frequencies is an inverted version of the transfer function estimate and (b) one or more filters whose transfer function for a range of frequencies higher than said lower range of frequencies is variably controlled by a gradient descent minimization process, and (2) a speech and/or music audio signal filtered by a target response filter and also filtered by said series arrangement of filters.
42. A method for obtaining a set of filters whose linear combination estimates the impulse response of a time-varying transmission channel, comprising obtaining M filter observations, the observations including the impulse responses of the transmission channel across its range of possible variations with time, selecting N of M filters according to an eigenvector method, determining, in real-time, a linear combination of the N filters that forms an optimal estimate of the transmission channel.
43. The method of enumerated example embodiment 42 wherein the N selected filters are determined by deriving the eigenvectors of the autocorrelation matrix of the M observations.
44. The method of enumerated example embodiment 42 wherein the N selected filters are determined by deriving the eigenvectors resulting from performing a Singular Value Decomposition of a rectangular matrix in which the rows of the matrix are said M observations.
45. The method of any one of enumerated example embodiments 42-44 wherein a scaling factor for each of the N eigenvector filters is obtained using a gradient-descent optimization.
46. The method of enumerated example embodiment 45 wherein said gradient-descent optimization employs an LMS algorithm.
47. The method of any one of enumerated example embodiments 42-46 wherein said M observations are measured impulse responses of real or simulated transmission channels.
48. Apparatus adapted to perform the methods of any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-47.
49. Apparatus comprising means adapted to perform each step of the method of any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-47.
50. A computer program, stored on a computer-readable medium, for causing a computer to perform the methods of any one of enumerated example embodiments 1-47.
A number of example embodiments of the invention have been described in the specification. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, some of the steps described herein may be order independent, and thus can be performed in an order different from that described.
This application claims priority to U.S. Patent Provisional Application No. 61/137,377, filed 29 Jul. 2008, hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2009/052042 | 7/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/27/2011 |
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WO2010/014663 | 2/4/2010 | WO | A |
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