This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. §365 of International Application PCT/EP03/11242, filed Oct. 10, 2003, which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on Apr. 29, 2004 in English and which claims the benefit of European patent application No. 02022866.4, filed Oct. 14, 2002; European patent application No. 02026770.4, filed Dec. 2, 2002; and European patent application No. 03004732.8, filed Mar. 4, 2003.
The invention relates to a method and to an apparatus for coding and decoding a presentation description of audio signals, especially for describing the presentation of sound sources encoded as audio objects according to the MPEG-4 Audio standard.
MPEG-4 as defined in the MPEG-4 Audio standard ISO/IEC 14496-3:2001 and the MPEG-4 Systems standard 14496-1:2001 facilitates a wide variety of applications by supporting the representation of audio objects. For the combination of the audio objects additional information—the so-called scene description—determines the placement in space and time and is transmitted together with the coded audio objects.
For playback the audio objects are decoded separately and composed using the scene description in order to prepare a single soundtrack, which is then played to the listener.
For efficiency, the MPEG-4 Systems standard ISO/IEC 14496-1:2001 defines a way to encode the scene description in a binary representation, the so-called Binary Format for Scene Description (BIFS). Correspondingly, audio scenes are described using so-called AudioBIFS.
A scene description is structured hierarchically and can be represented as a graph, wherein leaf-nodes of the graph form the separate objects and the other nodes describes the processing, e.g. positioning, scaling, effects etc. The appearance and behavior of the separate objects can be controlled using parameters within the scene description nodes.
The invention is based on the recognition of the following fact. The above mentioned version of the MPEG-4 Audio standard cannot describe sound sources that have a certain dimension, like a choir, orchestra, sea or rain but only a point source, e.g. a flying insect, or a single instrument. However, according to listening tests wideness of sound sources is clearly audible.
Therefore, a problem to be solved by the invention is to overcome the above mentioned drawback. This problem is solved by the coding method disclosed in claim 1 and the corresponding decoding method disclosed in claim 3.
In principle, the inventive coding method comprises the generation of a parametric description of a sound source which is linked with the audio signals of the sound source, wherein describing the wideness of a non-point sound source is described by means of the parametric description and a presentation of the non-point sound source is defined by multiple decorrelated point sound sources.
The inventive decoding method comprises, in principle, the reception of an audio signal corresponding to a sound source linked with a parametric description of the sound source. The parametric description of the sound source is evaluated for determining the wideness of a non-point sound source and multiple decorrelated point sound sources are assigned at different positions to the non-point sound source.
This allows the description of the wideness of sound sources that have a certain dimension in a simple and backwards compatible way. Especially, the playback of sound sources with a wide sound perception is possible with a monophonic signal, thus resulting in a low bit rate of the audio signal to be transmitted. An application is for example the mono-phonic transmission of an orchestra, which is not coupled to a fixed loudspeaker layout and allows to position it at a desired location.
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
This AudioSpatialDiffuseness node ND receives an audio signal AI consisting of one or more channels and will produce after decorrelation DECan audio signal AO having the same number of channels as output. In MPEG-4 terms this audio input corresponds to a so-called child, which is defined as a branch that is connected to an upper level branch and can be inserted in each branch of an audio subtree without changing any other node.
A diffuseSelection field DIS allows to control the selection of diffuseness algorithms. Therefore, in case of several AudioSpatialDiffuseness nodes each node can apply a different diffuseness algorithms, thus producing different outputs and ensuring a decorrelation of the respective outputs. A diffuseness node can virtually produce N different signals, but pass through only one real signal to the output of the node, selected by the diffuseselect field. However, it is also possible that multiple real signals are produced by a signal diffuseness node and are put at the output of the node. Other fields like a field indicating the decorrelation strength DES could be added to the node, if required. This decorrelation strength could be measured e.g. with a cross-correlation function.
Table 1 shows possible semantics of the proposed AudioSpatialDiffuseness node. Children can be added or deleted to the node with the help of the addChildren field or remove—Children field, respectively. The children field contains the IDs, i.e. references, of the connected children. The diffuseSelect field and decorrestrength field are defined as scalar 32 bit integer values. The numChan field defines the number of channels at the output of the node. The phaseGroup field describes whether the output signals of the node are grouped together as phase related or not.
However, this is only one embodiment of the proposed node, different and/or additional fields are possible.
In the case of numChan greater than one, i.e. multichannel audio signals, each channel should be diffused separately.
For presentation of a non-point sound source by multiple decorrelated point sound sources the number and positions of the decorrelated multiple point sound sources have to be defined. This can be done either automatically or manually and by either explicit position parameters for an exact number of point sources or by relative parameters like the density of the point sound sources within a given shape. Furthermore, the presentation can be manipulated by using the intensity or direction of each point source as well as using the AudioDelay and AudioEffects nodes as defined in ISO/IEC 14496-1.
Table 2 shows possible semantics for this example. A grouping with 3 sound objects POS1, POS2, and POS3 is defined. The normalized intensity is 0.9 for POS and 0.8 for POS2 and POS3. Their position is addressed by using the ‘location’-field which in this case is a 3D-vector. POS1 is localized at the origin 0, 0, 0 and POS2 and POS3 are positioned −3 and 3 units in x direction relative to the origin, respectively. The ‘spatialize’-field of the nodes is set to ‘true’, signaling that the sound has to be spatialized depending on the parameter in the ‘location’-field. A 1-channel audio signal is used as indicated by numchan 1 and different diffuseness algorithms are selected in the respective AudioSpatialDiffuseness Node, as indicated by diffuse—Select 1, 2 or 3. In the first AudioSpatialDiffuseness Node the AudioSource BEACH is defined, which is a 1-channel audio signal, and can be found at url 100. The second and third first AudioSpatialDiffuseness Node make use of the same AudioSource BEACH. This allows to reduce the computational power in an MPEG-4 player since the audio decoder converting the encoded audio data into PCM output signals only has to do the encoding once. For this purpose the renderer of the MPEG-4 player passes the scene tree to identify identical AudioSources.
According to a further embodiment primitive shapes are defined within the AudioSpatialDiffuseness nodes. An advantageous selection of shapes comprises e.g. a box, a sphere and a cylinder. All of these nodes could have a location field, a size and a rotation, as shown in table 3.
If one vector element of the size field is set to zero a volume will be flat, resulting in a wall or a disk. If two vector elements are zero a line results.
Another approach to describe a size or a shape in a 3D coordinate system is to control the width of the sound with an opening-angle relative to the listener. The angle has a vertical and a horizontal component, ‘widthHorizontal’ and ‘widthvertical’, ranging from 0 . . . 2π with the location as its center. The definition of the widthHorizontal component φ is generally shown in
Furthermore, the above-mentioned primitive shapes can be combined to do more complex shapes.
A BIFS example for the scene of
In the case of a 2D scene it is still assumed that the sound will be 3D. Therefore it is proposed to use a second set of SoundVolume nodes, where the z-axis is replaced by a single float field with the name ‘depth’ as shown in table 5.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02022866 | Oct 2002 | EP | regional |
02026770 | Dec 2002 | EP | regional |
03004732 | Mar 2003 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/11242 | 10/10/2003 | WO | 00 | 4/11/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2004/036548 | 4/29/2004 | WO | A |
Entry |
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G. Potard and J. Spille: “Study of Sound Source Shape and Wideness in Virtual and Real Auditory Displays”, 114th AES Convention, Mar. 22-25, 2003. |
Convenor: “Coding of moving pictures and audio, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11/N4907” Organisation Internationale De Normalisation, Jul. 2002. |
H. Purnhagen: “An overview of MPEG-4 audio version 2”, AES 17th International COnference on High Quality Audio Coding, Sep. 2-5, 1999. |
G.Potard et al.: “Using XML schemas to create and encode interactive 3-D audio scenes for multimedia and virtual reality applications”, Distributed Communities on the Web. 4th Int'l Workshop, DCW 2002, Revised Papers (Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol. 2468), Apr. 3-5, 2002, pp. 193-203. |
G. Potard and I Burnett: “A study on sound source apparent shape and wideness” Proceedings of the 2003 International Conference on Auditory Display, Jul. 6-9, 2003. |
Search Report Dated Jan. 14, 2004. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060165238 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |