Methods and apparatus for compressing and decompressing a higher order ambisonics representation

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 10999688
  • Patent Number
    10,999,688
  • Date Filed
    Monday, April 6, 2020
    4 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 4, 2021
    2 years ago
Abstract
Higher Order Ambisonics represents three-dimensional sound independent of a specific loudspeaker set-up. However, transmission of an HOA representation results in a very high bit rate. Therefore, compression with a fixed number of channels is used, in which directional and ambient signal components are processed differently. The ambient HOA component is represented by a minimum number of HOA coefficient sequences. The remaining channels contain either directional signals or additional coefficient sequences of the ambient HOA component, depending on what will result in optimum perceptual quality. This processing can change on a frame-by-frame basis.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The invention relates to a method and to an apparatus for compressing and decompressing a Higher Order Ambisonics representation by processing directional and ambient signal components differently.


BACKGROUND

Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) offers one possibility to represent three-dimensional sound among other techniques like wave field synthesis (WFS) or channel based approaches like 22.2. In contrast to channel based methods, however, the HOA representation offers the advantage of being independent of a specific loudspeaker set-up. This flexibility, however, is at the expense of a decoding process which is required for the playback of the HOA representation on a particular loudspeaker set-up. Compared to the WFS approach, where the number of required loudspeakers is usually very large, HOA may also be rendered to set-ups consisting of only few loudspeakers. A further advantage of HOA is that the same representation can also be employed without any modification for binaural rendering to head-phones.


HOA is based on the representation of the spatial density of complex harmonic plane wave amplitudes by a truncated Spherical Harmonics (SH) expansion. Each expansion coefficient is a function of angular frequency, which can be equivalently represented by a time domain function. Hence, without loss of generality, the complete HOA sound field representation actually can be assumed to consist of O time domain functions, where O denotes the number of expansion coefficients. These time domain functions will be equivalently referred to as HOA coefficient sequences or as HOA channels.


The spatial resolution of the HOA representation improves with a growing maximum order N of the expansion. Unfortunately, the number of expansion coefficients O grows quadratically with the order N, in particular O=(N+1)2. For example, typical HOA representations using order N=4 require O=25 HOA (expansion) coefficients. According to the previously made considerations, the total bit rate for the transmission of HOA representation, given a desired single-channel sampling rate fS and the number of bits Nb per sample, is determined by O·fS·Nb. Consequently, transmitting an HOA representation of order N=4 with a sampling rate of fS=48 kHz employing Nb=16 bits per sample results in a bit rate of 19.2 MBits/s, which is very high for many practical applications, e.g. for streaming.


Compression of HOA sound field representations is proposed in patent applications EP 12306569.0 and EP 12305537.8. Instead of perceptually coding each one of the HOA coefficient sequences individually, as it is performed e.g. in E. Hellerud, I. Burnett, A. Solvang and U. P. Svensson, “Encoding Higher Order Ambisonics with AAC”, 124th AES Convention, Amsterdam, 2008, it is attempted to reduce the number of signals to be perceptually coded, in particular by performing a sound field analysis and decomposing the given HOA representation into a directional and a residual ambient component. The directional component is in general supposed to be represented by a small number of dominant directional signals which can be regarded as general plane wave functions. The order of the residual ambient HOA component is reduced because it is assumed that, after the extraction of the dominant directional signals, the lower-order HOA coefficients are carrying the most relevant information.


SUMMARY OF INVENTION

Altogether, by such operation the initial number (N+1)2 of HOA coefficient sequences to be perceptually coded is reduced to a fixed number of D dominant directional signals and a number of (NRED+1)2 HOA coefficient sequences representing the residual ambient HOA component with a truncated order NRED<N, whereby the number of signals to be coded is fixed, i.e. D+(NRED+1)2. In particular, this number is independent of the actually detected number DACT(k)≤D of active dominant directional sound sources in a time frame k. This means that in time frames k, where the actually detected number DACT(k) of active dominant directional sound sources is smaller than the maximum allowed number D of directional signals, some or even all of the dominant directional signals to be perceptually coded are zero. Ultimately, this means that these channels are not used at all for capturing the relevant information of the sound field.


In this context, a further possibly weak point in the EP 12306569.0 and EP 12305537.8 processings is the criterion for the determination of the amount of active dominant directional signals in each time frame, because it is not attempted to determine an optimal amount of active dominant directional signals with respect to the successive perceptual coding of the sound field. For instance, in EP 12305537.8 the amount of dominant sound sources is estimated using a simple power criterion, namely by determining the dimension of the subspace of the inter-coefficients correlation matrix belonging to the greatest eigenvalues. In EP 12306569.0 an incremental detection of dominant directional sound sources is proposed, where a directional sound source is considered to be dominant if the power of the plane wave function from the respective direction is high enough with respect to the first directional signal. Using power based criteria like in EP 12306569.0 and EP 12305537.8 may lead to a directional-ambient decomposition which is suboptimal with respect to perceptual coding of the sound field.


A problem to be solved by the invention is to improve HOA compression by determining for a current HOA audio signal content how to assign to a predetermined reduced number of channels, directional signals and coefficients for the ambient HOA component.


The invention improves the compression processing proposed in EP 12306569.0 in two aspects. First, the bandwidth provided by the given number of channels to be perceptually coded is better exploited. In time frames where no dominant sound source signals are detected, the channels originally reserved for the dominant directional signals are used for capturing additional information about the ambient component, in the form of additional HOA coefficient sequences of the residual ambient HOA component. Second, having in mind the goal to exploit a given number of channels to perceptually code a given HOA sound field representation, the criterion for the determination of the amount of directional signals to be extracted from the HOA representation is adapted with respect to that purpose. The number of directional signals is determined such that the decoded and reconstructed HOA representation provides the lowest perceptible error. That criterion compares the modelling errors arising either from extracting a directional signal and using a HOA coefficient sequence less for describing the residual ambient HOA component, or arising from not extracting a directional signal and instead using an additional HOA coefficient sequence for describing the residual ambient HOA component. That criterion further considers for both cases the spatial power distribution of the quantisation noise introduced by the perceptual coding of the directional signals and the HOA coefficient sequences of the residual ambient HOA component.


In order to implement the above-described processing, before starting the HOA compression, a total number I of signals (channels) is specified compared to which the original number of O HOA coefficient sequences is reduced. The ambient HOA component is assumed to be represented by a minimum number ORED of HOA coefficient sequences. In some cases, that minimum number can be zero. The remaining D=I−ORED channels are supposed to contain either directional signals or additional coefficient sequences of the ambient HOA component, depending on what the directional signal extraction processing decides to be perceptually more meaningful. It is assumed that the assigning of either directional signals or ambient HOA component coefficient sequences to the remaining D channels can change on frame-by-frame basis. For reconstruction of the sound field at receiver side, information about the assignment is transmitted as extra side information.


In principle, the inventive compression method is suited for compressing using a fixed number of perceptual encodings a Higher Order Ambisonics representation of a sound field, denoted HOA, with input time frames of HOA coefficient sequences, said method including the following steps which are carried out on a frame-by-frame basis:

    • for a current frame, estimating a set of dominant directions and a corresponding data set of indices of detected directional signals;
    • decomposing the HOA coefficient sequences of said current frame into a non-fixed number of directional signals with respective directions contained in said set of dominant direction estimates and with a respective data set of indices of said directional signals, wherein said non-fixed number is smaller than said fixed number,


      and into a residual ambient HOA component that is represented by a reduced number of HOA coefficient sequences and a corresponding data set of indices of said reduced number of residual ambient HOA coefficient sequences, which reduced number corresponds to the difference between said fixed number and said non-fixed number;
    • assigning said directional signals and the HOA coefficient sequences of said residual ambient HOA component to channels the number of which corresponds to said fixed number, wherein for said assigning said data set of indices of said directional signals and said data set of indices of said reduced number of residual ambient HOA coefficient sequences are used;
    • perceptually encoding said channels of the related frame so as to provide an encoded compressed frame.


In principle the inventive compression apparatus is suited for compressing using a fixed number of perceptual encodings a Higher Order Ambisonics representation of a sound field, denoted HOA, with input time frames of HOA coefficient sequences, said apparatus carrying out a frame-by-frame based processing and including:

    • means being adapted for estimating for a current frame a set of dominant directions and a corresponding data set of indices of detected directional signals;
    • means being adapted for decomposing the HOA coefficient sequences of said current frame into a non-fixed number of directional signals with respective directions contained in said set of dominant direction estimates and with a respective data set of indices of said directional signals, wherein said non-fixed number is smaller than said fixed number,


      and into a residual ambient HOA component that is represented by a reduced number of HOA coefficient sequences and a corresponding data set of indices of said reduced number of residual ambient HOA coefficient sequences, which reduced number corresponds to the difference between said fixed number and said non-fixed number;
    • means being adapted for assigning said directional signals and the HOA coefficient sequences of said residual ambient HOA component to channels the number of which corresponds to said fixed number, wherein for said assigning said data set of indices of said directional signals and said data set of indices of said reduced number of residual ambient HOA coefficient sequences are used;
    • means being adapted for perceptually encoding said channels of the related frame so as to provide an encoded compressed frame.


In principle, the inventive decompression method is suited for decompressing a Higher Order Ambisonics representation compressed according to the above compression method, said decompressing including the steps:

    • perceptually decoding a current encoded compressed frame so as to provide a perceptually decoded frame of channels;
    • re-distributing said perceptually decoded frame of channels, using said data set of indices of detected directional signals and said data set of indices of the chosen ambient HOA coefficient sequences, so as to recreate the corresponding frame of directional signals and the corresponding frame of the residual ambient HOA component;
    • re-composing a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from said frame of directional signals and from said frame of the residual ambient HOA component, using said data set of indices of detected directional signals and said set of dominant direction estimates,


      wherein directional signals with respect to uniformly distributed directions are predicted from said directional signals, and thereafter said current decompressed frame is re-composed from said frame of directional signals, said predicted signals and said residual ambient HOA component.


In principle the inventive decompression apparatus is suited for decompressing a Higher Order Ambisonics representation compressed according to the above compression method, said apparatus including:

    • means being adapted for perceptually decoding a current encoded compressed frame so as to provide a perceptually decoded frame of channels;
    • means being adapted for re-distributing said perceptually decoded frame of channels, using said data set of indices of detected directional signals and said data set of indices of the chosen ambient HOA coefficient sequences, so as to recreate the corresponding frame of directional signals and the corresponding frame of the residual ambient HOA component;
    • means being adapted for re-composing a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from said frame of directional signals, said frame of the residual ambient HOA component, said data set of indices of detected directional signals, and said set of dominant direction estimates,


      wherein directional signals with respect to uniformly distributed directions are predicted from said directional signals, and thereafter said current decompressed frame is re-composed from said frame of directional signals, said predicted signals and said residual ambient HOA component.


In one example, a method for decompressing a compressed Higher Order Ambisonics representation, includes

    • perceptually decoding a current encoded compressed frame to provide a perceptually decoded frame of channels;
    • re-distributing said perceptually decoded frame of channels based on an assignment vector indicating at least an index of a possibly contained coefficient sequence of an ambient HOA component and a data set of indices of directional signals in order to determine a corresponding frame of the ambient HOA component;
    • re-composing a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from the recreated frame of directional signals and from the recreated frame of the ambient HOA component based on a data set of indices of detected directional signals and a set of dominant direction estimates,


wherein directional signals with respect to uniformly distributed directions are predicted from said directional signals, and thereafter said current decompressed frame is re-composed from the recreated frame of directional signals, said predicted signals and said ambient HOA component.


In one example, an apparatus for decompressing a Higher Order Ambisonics representation compressed, said apparatus including:

    • means adapted for perceptually decoding a current encoded compressed frame so as to provide a perceptually decoded frame of channels;
    • means adapted for re-distributing said perceptually decoded frame of channels based on an assignment vector indicating at least an index of a possibly contained coefficient sequence of an ambient HOA component and a data set of indices of directional signals in order to determine a corresponding frame of the ambient HOA component;
    • means adapted for re-composing a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from the recreated frame of directional signals and from the recreated frame of the ambient HOA component based on a data set of indices of detected directional signals and a set of dominant direction estimates,


wherein directional signals with respect to uniformly distributed directions are predicted from said directional signals, and thereafter said current decompressed frame is re-composed from the recreated frame of directional signals, said predicted signals and said ambient HOA component.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

Exemplary embodiments of the invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show in:



FIG. 1 illustrates block diagram for the HOA compression;



FIG. 2 illustrates estimation of dominant sound source directions;



FIG. 3 illustrates block diagram for the HOA decompression;



FIG. 4 illustrates spherical coordinate system;



FIG. 5 illustrates normalised dispersion function νN(Θ) for different Ambisonics orders N and for angles θ∈[0,π].





DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

A. Improved HOA Compression


The compression processing according to the invention, which is based on EP 12306569.0, is illustrated in FIG. 1 where the signal processing blocks that have been modified or newly introduced compared to EP 12306569.0 are presented with a bold box, and where ‘custom character’, (direction estimates as such) and ‘C’ in this application correspond to ‘A’ (matrix of direction estimates) and ‘D’ in EP 12306569.0, respectively.


For the HOA compression a frame-wise processing with non-overlapping input frames C(k) of HOA coefficient sequences of length L is used, where k denotes the frame index. The frames are defined with respect to the HOA coefficient sequences specified in equation (45) as

C(k):=[c((kL+1)TS)c((kL+2)TS)c((k+1)LTS)],  (1)

where TS indicates the sampling period.


The first step or stage 11/12 in FIG. 1 is optional and consists of concatenating the non-overlapping k-th and the (k−1)-th frames of HOA coefficient sequences into a long frame {tilde over (C)}(k) as

{tilde over (C)}(k):=[C(k−1)C(k)],  (2)

which long frame is 50% overlapped with an adjacent long frame and which long frame is successively used for the estimation of dominant sound source directions. Similar to the notation for {tilde over (C)}(k), the tilde symbol is used in the following description for indicating that the respective quantity refers to long overlapping frames. If step/stage 11/12 is not present, the tilde symbol has no specific meaning.


In principle, the estimation step or stage 13 of dominant sound sources is carried out as proposed in EP 13305156.5, but with an important modification. The modification is related to the determination of the amount of directions to be detected, i.e. how many directional signals are supposed to be extracted from the HOA representation. This is accomplished with the motivation to extract directional signals only if it is perceptually more relevant than using instead additional HOA coefficient sequences for better approximation of the ambient HOA component. A detailed description of this technique is given in section A.2.


The estimation provides a data set custom characterDIR,ACT(k)⊆{1, . . . , D} of indices of directional signals that have been detected as well as the set custom characterΩ,ACT(k) of corresponding direction estimates. D denotes the maximum number of directional signals that has to be set before starting the HOA compression.


In step or stage 14, the current (long) frame {tilde over (C)}(k) of HOA coefficient sequences is decomposed (as proposed in EP 13305156.5) into a number of directional signals XDIR(k−2) belonging to the directions contained in the set custom characterΩ,ACT(k), and a residual ambient HOA component CAMB(k−2). The delay of two frames is introduced as a result of overlap-add processing in order to obtain smooth signals. It is assumed that XDIR(k−2) is containing a total of D channels, of which however only those corresponding to the active directional signals are non-zero. The indices specifying these channels are assumed to be output in the data set custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2) Additionally, the decomposition in step/stage 14 provides some parameters ζ(k−2) which are used at decompression side for predicting portions of the original HOA representation from the directional signals (see EP 13305156.5 for more details).


In step or stage 15, the number of coefficients of the ambient HOA component CAMB(k−2) is intelligently reduced to contain only ORED D−NDIR,ACT(k−2) non-zero HOA coefficient sequences, where NDIR,ACT(k−2)=|custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2)| indicates the cardinality of the data set custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2), i.e. the number of active directional signals in frame k−2. Since the ambient HOA component is assumed to be always represented by a minimum number ORED of HOA coefficient sequences, this problem can be actually reduced to the selection of the remaining D−NDIR,ACT(k−2) HOA coefficient sequences out of the possible O−ORED ones. In order to obtain a smooth reduced ambient HOA representation, this choice is accomplished such that, compared to the choice taken at the previous frame k−3, as few changes as possible will occur.


In particular, the three following cases are to be differentiated:

  • a) NDIR,ACT(k−2)=NDIR,ACT(k−3): In this case the same HOA coefficient sequences are assumed to be selected as in frame k−3.
  • b) NDIR,ACT(k−2)<NDIR,ACT(k−3): In this case, more HOA coefficient sequences than in the last frame k−3 can be used for representing the ambient HOA component in the current frame. Those HOA coefficient sequences that were selected in k−3 are assumed to be also selected in the current frame. The additional HOA coefficient sequences can be selected according to different criteria. For instance, selecting those HOA coefficient sequences in CAMB(k−2) with the highest average power, or selecting the HOA coefficients sequences with respect to their perceptual significance.
  • c) NDIR,ACT(k−2)>NDIR,ACT(k−3): In this case, less HOA coefficient sequences than in the last frame k−3 can be used for representing the ambient HOA component in the current frame. The question to be answered here is which of the previously selected HOA coefficient sequences have to be deactivated. A reasonable solution is to deactivate those sequences which were assigned to the channels i∈custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2) at the signal assigning step or stage 16 at frame k−3.


For avoiding discontinuities at frame borders when additional HOA coefficient sequences are activated or deactivated, it is advantageous to smoothly fade in or out the respective signals.


The final ambient HOA representation with the reduced number of ORED+NDIR,ACT(k−2) non-zero coefficient sequences is denoted by CAMB,RED(k−2). The indices of the chosen ambient HOA coefficient sequences are output in the data set custom characterAMB,ACT(k−2).


In step/stage 16, the active directional signals contained in XDIR(k−2) and the HOA coefficient sequences contained in CAMB,RED(k−2) are assigned to the frame Y(k−2) of I channels for individual perceptual encoding. To describe the signal assignment in more detail, the frames XDIR(k−2), Y(k−2) and CAMB,RED(k−2) are assumed to consist of the individual signals xDIR,d(k−2), d∈{1, . . . , D}, yi(k−2), i∈{1, . . . , I} and cAMB,RED,o(k−2), o∈{1, . . . , 0} as follows:












X

D

I

R




(

k
-
2

)


=

[





x

DIR
,
1




(

k
-
2

)








x

DIR
,
2




(

k
-
2

)













x

DIR
,
D




(

k
-
2

)





]


,







C

AMB
,
RED




(

k
-
2

)


=

[





C

AMB
,
RED
,
1




(

k
-
2

)








C

AMB
,
RED
,
2




(

k
-
2

)













C

AMB
,
RED
,
O




(

k
-
2

)





]


,






Y


(

k
-
2

)


=


[





y
1



(

k
-
2

)








y
2



(

k
-
2

)













y
I



(

k
-
2

)





]

.






(
3
)







The active directional signals are assigned such that they keep their channel indices in order to obtain continuous signals for the successive perceptual coding. This can be expressed by

yd(k−2)=xDIR,d(k−2) for all d∈custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2).  (4)


The HOA coefficient sequences of the ambient component are assigned such the minimum number of ORED coefficient sequences is always contained in the last ORED signals of Y(k−2), i.e.

yD+o(k−2)=cAMB,RED,o(k−2) for 1≤o≤ORED.  (5)


For the additional D−NDIR,ACT(k−2) HOA coefficient sequences of the ambient component it is to be differentiated whether or not they were also selected in the previous frame:

  • a) If they were also selected to be transmitted in the previous frame, i.e. if the respective indices are also contained in data set custom characterAMB,ACT(k−3), the assignment of these coefficient sequences to the signals in Y(k−2) is the same as for the previous frame. This operation assures smooth signals yi(k−2), which is favourable for the successive perceptual coding in step or stage 17.
  • b) Otherwise, if some coefficient sequences are newly selected, i.e. if their indices are contained in data set custom characterAMB,ACT(k−2) but not in data set custom characterAMB,ACT(k−3), they are first arranged with respect to their indices in an ascending order and are in this order assigned to channels i∉custom characterDIR,ACT(k−2) of Y(k−2) which are not yet occupied by directional signals.
    • This specific assignment offers the advantage that, during a HOA decompression process, the signal redistribution and composition can be performed without the knowledge about which ambient HOA coefficient sequence is contained in which channel of Y(k−2). Instead, the assignment can be reconstructed during HOA decompression with the mere knowledge of the data sets custom characterAMB,ACT(k−2) and custom characterDIR,ACT (k).


Advantageously, this assigning operation also provides the assignment vector γ(k)∈custom characterD−NDIR,ACT(k−2), whose elements γo(k), o=1, . . . , D−NDIR,ACT(k−2), denote the indices of each one of the additional D−NDIR,ACT(k−2) HOA coefficient sequences of the ambient component. To say it differently, the elements of the assignment vector γ(k) provide information about which of the additional O−ORED HOA coefficient sequences of the ambient HOA component are assigned into the D−NDIR,ACT(k−2) channels with inactive directional signals. This vector can be transmitted additionally, but less frequently than by the frame rate, in order to allow for an initialisation of the re-distribution procedure performed for the HOA decompression (see section B). Perceptual coding step/stage 17 encodes the I channels of frame Y(k−2) and outputs an encoded frame custom character(k−2).


For frames for which vector γ(k) is not transmitted from step/stage 16, at decompression side the data parameter sets custom characterDIR,ACT(k) and custom characterAMB,ACT(k−2) instead of vector γ(k) are used for the performing the re-distribution.


A.1 Estimation of the Dominant Sound Source Directions


The estimation step/stage 13 for dominant sound source directions of FIG. 1 is depicted in FIG. 2 in more detail. It is essentially performed according to that of EP 13305156.5, but with a decisive difference, which is the way of determining the amount of dominant sound sources, corresponding to the number of directional signals to be extracted from the given HOA representation. This number is significant because it is used for controlling whether the given HOA representation is better represented either by using more directional signals or instead by using more HOA coefficient sequences to better model the ambient HOA component.


The dominant sound source directions estimation starts in step or stage 21 with a preliminary search for the dominant sound source directions, using the long frame {tilde over (C)}(k) of input HOA coefficient sequences. Along with the preliminary direction estimates {tilde over (Ω)}DOM(d)(k), 1≤d≤D, the corresponding directional signals {tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k) and the HOA sound field components {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k), which are supposed to be created by the individual sound sources, are computed as described in EP 13305156.5. In step or stage 22, these quantities are used together with the frame {tilde over (C)}(k) of input HOA coefficient sequences for determining the number {tilde over (D)}(k) of directional signals to be extracted. Consequently, the direction estimates {tilde over (Ω)}DOM(d)(k), {tilde over (D)}(k)<d≤D, the corresponding directional signals {tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k), and HOA sound field components {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k) are discarded. Instead, only the direction estimates {tilde over (Ω)}DOM(d)(k), 1≤d≤{tilde over (D)}(k) are then assigned to previously found sound sources.


In step or stage 23, the resulting direction trajectories are smoothed according to a sound source movement model and it is determined which ones of the sound sources are supposed to be active (see EP 13305156.5). The last operation provides the set custom characterDIR,ACT(k) of indices of active directional sound sources and the set custom characterΩ,ACT(k) of the corresponding direction estimates.


A.2 Determination of Number of Extracted Directional Signals


For determining the number of directional signals in step/stage 22, the situation is assumed that there is a given total amount of I channels which are to be exploited for capturing the perceptually most relevant sound field information. Therefore, the number of directional signals to be extracted is determined, motivated by the question whether for the overall HOA compression/decompression quality the current HOA representation is represented better by using either more directional signals, or more HOA coefficient sequences for a better modelling of the ambient HOA component.


To derive in step/stage 22 a criterion for the determination of the number of directional sound sources to be extracted, which criterion is related to the human perception, it is taken into consideration that HOA compression is achieved in particular by the following two operations:

    • reduction of HOA coefficient sequences for representing the ambient HOA component (which means reduction of the number of related channels);
    • perceptual encoding of the directional signals and of the HOA coefficient sequences for representing the ambient HOA component.


Depending on the number M, 0≤M≤D, of extracted directional signals, the first operation results in the approximation











C
~



(
k
)





C
~


(
M
)






(
6
)







:=




C
~

DIR

(
M
)




(
k
)


+



C
~


AMB
,
RED


(
M
)




(
k
)




,
where




(
7
)









C
~

DIR

(
M
)




(
k
)


:=


Σ

d
=
1

M





C
~


DOM
,
CORR


(
d
)




(
k
)







(
8
)








denotes the HOA representation of the directional component consisting of the HOA sound field components {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k), 1≤d≤M, supposed to be created by the M individually considered sound sources, and {tilde over (C)}AMB,RED(M)(k) denotes the HOA representation of the ambient component with only I−M non-zero HOA coefficient sequences.


The approximation from the second operation can be expressed by











C
~



(
k
)






(
M
)




(
k
)






(
9
)











:=



DIR

(
M
)




(
k
)


+



AMB
,
RED


(
M
)




(
k
)








(
10
)








where custom characterDIR(M)(k) and custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k) denote the composed directional and ambient HOA components after perceptual decoding, respectively.


Formulation of Criterion


The number {tilde over (D)}(k) of directional signals to be extracted is chosen such that the total approximation error

custom character(M)(k):={tilde over (C)}(k)−custom character(M)(k)  (11)

with M={tilde over (D)}(k) is as less significant as possible with respect to the human perception. To assure this, the directional power distribution of the total error for individual Bark scale critical bands is considered at a predefined number Q of test directions Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q, which are nearly uniformly distributed on the unit sphere. To be more specific, the directional power distribution for the b-th critical band, b=1, . . . , B, is represented by the vector

custom character(M)(k,b):=[custom character1(M)(k,b)custom character2(M)(k,b) . . . custom characterQ(M)(k,b)]T,  (12)

whose components custom characterq(M)(k,b) denote the power of the total error custom character(M)(k) related to the direction Ωq, the b-th Bark scale critical band and the k-th frame. The directional power distribution custom character(M)(k,b) of the total error custom character(M)(k) is compared with the directional perceptual masking power distribution

custom characterMASK(k,b):=[custom characterMASK,1(k,b)custom characterMASK,2(k,b) . . . custom characterMASK,Q(k,b)]T  (13)

due to the original HOA representation {tilde over (C)}(k). Next, for each test direction Ωq and critical band b the level of perception custom characterq(M)(k,b) of the total error is computed. It is here essentially defined as the ratio of the directional power of the total error custom character(M)(k) and the directional masking power according to











q

(
M
)




(

k
,
b

)


:=


max


(

0
,




q

(
M
)




(

k
,
b

)





MASK
,
q




(

k
,
b

)



-
1


)


.





(
14
)








The subtraction of ‘1’ and the successive maximum operation is performed to ensure that the perception level is zero, as long as the error power is below the masking threshold.


Finally, the number {tilde over (D)}(k) of directionals signals to be extracted can be chosen to minimise the average over all test directions of the maximum of the error perception level over all critical bands, i.e.,











D
~



(
k
)


=



arg





min

M







1
Q



Σ

q
=
1

Q




max
b




q

(
M
)





(

k
,
b

)

.








(
15
)








It is noted that, alternatively, it is possible to replace the maximum by an averaging operation in equation (15).


Computation of the Directional Perceptual Masking Power Distribution


For the computation of the directional perceptual masking power distribution custom characterMASK(k,b) due to the original HOA representation {tilde over (C)}(k), the latter is transformed to the spatial domain in order to be represented by general plane waves {tilde over (ν)}q(k) impinging from the test directions Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q. When arranging the general plane wave signals {tilde over (ν)}q(k) in the matrix {tilde over (V)}(k) as












V
~



(
k
)


=

[






v
˜

1



(
k
)









v
˜

2



(
k
)














v
˜

Q



(
k
)





]


,




(
16
)








the transformation to the spatial domain is expressed by the operation

{tilde over (V)}(k)=ΞT{tilde over (C)}(k),  (17)

where Ξ denotes the mode matrix with respect to the test direction Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q, defined by

Ξ:=[S1S2 . . . SQ]∈custom characterO×Q  (18)

with Sq:=

[S00q)S−1−1q)S−10q)S−11q)S−2−2q) . . . SNNq)]Tcustom characterO.  (19)

The elements custom characterMASK(k,b) of the directional perceptual masking power distribution custom characterMASK(k,b), due to the original HOA representation {tilde over (C)}(k), are corresponding to the masking powers of the general plane wave functions {tilde over (ν)}q(k) for individual critical bands b.


Computation of Directional Power Distribution


In the following two alternatives for the computation of the directional power distribution custom character(M)(k,b) are presented:

  • a. One possibility is to actually compute the approximation custom character(M)(k) of the desired HOA representation {tilde over (C)}(k) by performing the two operations mentioned at the beginning of section A.2. Then the total approximation error custom character(M)(k) is computed according to equation (11). Next, the total approximation error custom character(M)(k) is transformed to the spatial domain in order to be represented by general plane waves custom characterq(M)(k) impinging from the test directions Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q. Arranging the general plane wave signals in the matrix custom character(M)(k) as













(
M
)




(
k
)


=

[





1

(
M
)




(
k
)








2

(
M
)




(
k
)













Q

(
M
)




(
k
)





]


,




(
20
)









    • the transformation to the spatial domain is expressed by the operation

      custom character(M)(k)=ΞTcustom character(M)(k).  (21)

    • The elements custom characterq(M)(k,b) of the directional power distribution custom character(M)(k,b) of the total approximation error custom character(M)(k) are obtained by computing the powers of the general plane wave functions custom characterq(M)(k), q=1, . . . , Q, within individual critical bands b.



  • b. The alternative solution is to compute only the approximation {tilde over (C)}(M)(k) instead of custom character(M)(k). This method offers the advantage that the complicated perceptual coding of the individual signals needs not be carried out directly. Instead, it is sufficient to know the powers of the perceptual quantisation error within individual Bark scale critical bands. For this purpose, the total approximation error defined in equation (11) can be written as a sum of the three following approximation errors:

    {tilde over (E)}(M)(k):={tilde over (C)}(k)−{tilde over (C)}(M)(k)  (22)
    custom characterDIR(M)(k):={tilde over (C)}DIR(k)−custom characterDIR(M)(k)  (23)
    custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k):={tilde over (C)}AMB,RED(k)−custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k)  (24)
    • which can be assumed to be independent of each other. Due to this independence, the directional power distribution of the total error custom character(M)(k) can be expressed as the sum of the directional power distributions of the three individual errors {tilde over (E)}(M)(k), custom characterDIR(M)(k) and custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k).



The following describes how to compute the directional power distributions of the three errors for individual Bark scale critical bands:

  • a. To compute the directional power distribution of the error {tilde over (E)}(M)(k), it is first transformed to the spatial domain by

    {tilde over (W)}(M)(k)=ΞT{tilde over (E)}(M)(k),  (25)
    • wherein the approximation error {tilde over (E)}(M)(k) is hence represented by general plane waves {tilde over (w)}q(M)(k) impinging from the test directions Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q, which are arranged in the matrix {tilde over (W)}(M)(k) according to












W
~


(
M
)




(
k
)


=


[






w
~

1

(
M
)




(
k
)









w
~

2

(
M
)




(
k
)














w
~

Q

(
M
)




(
k
)





]

.





(
26
)









    • Consequently, the elements custom characterq(M)(k,b) of the directional power distribution custom character(M)(k,b) of the approximation error {tilde over (E)}(M)(k) are obtained by computing the powers of the general plane wave functions {tilde over (w)}(M)(k), q=1, . . . , Q, within individual critical bands b.



  • b. For computing the directional power distribution custom characterDIR(M)(k,b) of the error custom characterDIR(M)(k), it is to be borne in mind that this error is introduced into the directional HOA component {tilde over (C)}DIR(M)(k) by perceptually coding the directional signals {tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k), 1≤d≤M. Further, it is to be considered that the directional HOA component is given by equation (8). Then for simplicity it is assumed that the HOA component {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k) is equivalently represented in the spatial domain by O general plane wave functions {tilde over (ν)}GRID,o(d)(k), which are created from the directional signal {tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k) by a mere scaling, i.e.

    {tilde over (ν)}GRID,o(d)(k)=αo(d)(k){tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k),   (27)
    • where αo(d)(k), o=1, . . . , O, denote the scaling parameters. The respective plane wave directions {tilde over (Ω)}ROT,o(d)(k), o=1, . . . , O, are assumed to be uniformly distributed on the unit sphere and rotated such that {tilde over (Ω)}ROT,1(d)(k) corresponds to the direction estimate {tilde over (Ω)}DOM(d)(k). Hence, the scaling parameter α1(d)(k) is equal to ‘1’.
    • When defining ΞGRID(d)(k) to be the mode matrix with respect to the rotated directions {tilde over (Ω)}ROT,o(d)(k), o=1, . . . , O, and arranging all scaling parameters αo(d)(k) in a vector according to

      α(d)(k):=[1α2(d)(k3(d)(k) . . . αO(d)(k)]Tcustom characterO,  (28)
    • the HOA component {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k) can be written as

      {tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k)=ΞGRID(d)(k(d)(k){tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k).  (29)
    • Consequently, the error custom characterDIR(M)(k) (see equation (23)) between the true directional HOA component

      {tilde over (C)}DIR(M)(k)=Σd=1M{tilde over (C)}DOM,CORR(d)(k)  (30)
    • and that composed from the perceptually decoded directional signals custom characterDOM(d)(k), d=1, . . . , M, by













D

I

R


(
M
)




(
k
)


=


Σ

d
=
1

M





D

O

M

,

C

O

R

R



(
d
)




(
k
)






(
31
)











:=


Σ

d
=
1

M




Ξ
GRID

(
d
)




(
k
)





α

(
d
)




(
k
)





D

O

M


(
d
)




(
k
)







(
32
)









    • can be expressed in terms of the perceptual coding errors

      custom characterDOM(d)(k):={tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k)−custom characterDOM(d)(k)  (33)

    • in the individual directional signals by

      custom characterDIR(M)(k)=Σd=1MΞGRID(d)(k(d)(k)custom characterDOM(d)(k).  (34)

    • The representation of the error custom characterDIR(M)(k) in the spatial domain with respect to the test directions Ωq, q=1, . . . , Q, is given by















DIR
,
q


(
M
)




(
d
)


=


Σ

d
=
1

M





Ξ
T




Ξ
GRID

(
d
)




(
k
)





α

(
d
)




(
k
)






=

:


β

(
d
)




(
k
)








DOM

(
d
)





(
k
)

.






(
35
)









    • Denoting the elements of the vector β(d)(k) by βq(d)(k), q=1, . . . , Q, and assuming the individual perceptual coding errors custom characterDOM(d)(k), d=1, . . . , M, to be independent of each other, it follows from equation (35) that the elements custom characterDIR,q(M)(k,b) of the directional power distribution custom characterDIR(M)(k,b) of the perceptual coding error custom characterDIR(M)(k) can be computed by

      custom characterDIR,q(M)(k,b)=Σd=1Mq(d)(k))2{tilde over (σ)}DIR,d2(k,b).  (36)

    • {tilde over (σ)}DIR,d2(k,b) is supposed to represent the power of the perceptual quantisation error within the b-th critical band in the directional signal custom characterDOM(d)(k). This power can be assumed to correspond to the perceptual masking power of the directional signal {tilde over (x)}DOM(d)(k).



  • c. For computing the directional power distribution custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k,b) of the error custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k) resulting from the perceptual coding of the HOA coefficient sequences of the ambient HOA component, each HOA coefficient sequence is assumed to be coded independently. Hence, the errors introduced into the individual HOA coefficient sequences within each Bark scale critical band can be assumed to be uncorrelated. This means that the inter-coefficient correlation matrix of the error custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k) with respect to each Bark scale critical band is diagonal, i.e.

    {tilde over (Σ)}AMB,RED(M)(k,b)=diag({tilde over (σ)}AMB,RED,12(M)(k,b),{tilde over (σ)}AMB,RED,22(M)(k,b), . . . ,{tilde over (σ)}AMB,RED,O2(M)(k,b)).  (37)
    • The elements {tilde over (σ)}AMB,RED,o2(M)(k,b), o=1, . . . , O, are supposed to represent the power of the perceptual quantisation error within the b-th critical band in the o-th coded HOA coefficient sequence in custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k). They can be assumed to correspond to the perceptual masking power of the o-th HOA coefficient sequence {tilde over (C)}AMB,RED(M)(k). The directional power distribution of the perceptual coding error custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k) is thus computed by

      custom characterAMB,RED(M)(k,b)=diag(ΞT{tilde over (Σ)}AMB,RED(M)(k,b)Ξ).  (38)

      B. Improved HOA decompression



The corresponding HOA decompression processing is depicted in FIG. 3 and includes the following steps or stages.


In step or stage 31 a perceptual decoding of the I signals contained in custom character(k−2) is performed in order to obtain the I decoded signals in Ŷ(k−2).


In signal re-distributing step or stage 32, the perceptually decoded signals in Ŷ(k−2) are re-distributed in order to recreate the frame {circumflex over (X)}DIR(k−2) of directional signals and the frame ĈAMB,RED (k−2) of the ambient HOA component. The information about how to re-distribute the signals is obtained by reproducing the assigning operation performed for the HOA compression, using the index data sets custom characterDIR,ACT (k) and custom characterAMB,ACT (k−2) Since this is a recursive procedure (see section A), the additionally transmitted assignment vector γ(k) can be used in order to allow for an initialisation of the re-distribution procedure, e.g. in case the transmission is breaking down.


In composition step or stage 33, a current frame Ĉ(k−3) of the desired total HOA representation is re-composed (according to the processing described in connection with FIG. 2b and FIG. 4 of EP 12306569.0 using the frame {circumflex over (X)}DIR(k−2) of the directional signals, the set custom characterDIR,ACT(k) of the active directional signal indices together with the set custom characterΩ,ACT(k) of the corresponding directions, the parameters ζ(k−2) for predicting portions of the HOA representation from the directional signals, and the frame ĈAMB,RED(k−2) of HOA coefficient sequences of the reduced ambient HOA component. ĈAMB,RED(k−2) corresponds to component {circumflex over (D)}A(k−2) in EP 12306569.0, and custom characterΩ,ACT (k) and custom characterDIR,ACT(k) correspond to A{circumflex over (Ω)}(k) in EP 12306569.0, wherein active directional signal indices are marked in the matrix elements of A{circumflex over (Ω)}(k). I.e., directional signals with respect to uniformly distributed directions are predicted from the directional signals ({circumflex over (X)}DIR(k−2)) using the received parameters (ζ(k−2)) for such prediction, and thereafter the current decompressed frame (Ĉ(k−3)) is re-composed from the frame of directional signals ({circumflex over (X)}DIR(k−2)), the predicted portions and the reduced ambient HOA component (ĈAMB,RED(k−2)).


C. Basics of Higher Order Ambisonics


Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) is based on the description of a sound field within a compact area of interest, which is assumed to be free of sound sources. In that case the spatiotemporal behaviour of the sound pressure p(t,x) at time t and position x within the area of interest is physically fully determined by the homogeneous wave equation. In the following a spherical coordinate system as shown in FIG. 4 is assumed. In the used coordinate system, the x axis points to the frontal position, the y axis points to the left, and the z axis points to the top. A position in space x=(r,θ,ϕ)T is represented by a radius r>0 (i.e. the distance to the coordinate origin), an inclination angle θ∈[0,1π] measured from the polar axis z and an azimuth angle ϕ∈[0,2π] measured counter-clockwise in the x-y plane from the x axis. Further, (·)T denotes the transposition.


It can be shown (see E. G. Williams, “Fourier Acoustics”, volume 93 of Applied Mathematical Sciences, Academic Press, 1999) that the Fourier transform of the sound pressure with respect to time denoted by custom charactert(·), i.e.

P(ω,x)=custom charactert(p(t,x))=∫−∞p(t,x)e−iωtdt,  (39)

with ω denoting the angular frequency and i indicating the imaginary unit, can be expanded into a series of Spherical Harmonics according to

P(ω=kcS,r,θ,ϕ)=Σn=0NΣm=−nnAnm(k)jn(kr)Snm(θ,ϕ).  (40)


In equation (40), cS denotes the speed of sound and k denotes the angular wave number, which is related to the angular frequency ω by






k
=


ω

c
s


.






Further, jn(·) denote the spherical Bessel functions of the first kind and Snm(θ,ϕ) denote the real valued Spherical Harmonics of order n and degree m, which are defined in below section C.1. The expansion coefficients Anm(k) are depending only on the angular wave number k. In the foregoing it has been implicitly assumed that sound pressure is spatially band-limited. Thus, the series of Spherical Harmonics is truncated with respect to the order index n at an upper limit N, which is called the order of the HOA representation.


If the sound field is represented by a superposition of an infinite number of harmonic plane waves of different angular frequencies ω arriving from all possible directions specified by the angle tuple (θ,ϕ), it can be shown (see B. Rafaely, “Plane-wave Decomposition of the Sound Field on a Sphere by Spherical Convolution”, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 4(116), pages 2149-2157, 2004) that the respective plane wave complex amplitude function C(ω,θ,ϕ) can be expressed by the following Spherical Harmonics expansion

C(ω=kcS,θ,ϕ)=Σn=0NΣm=−nnCnm(k)Snm(θ,ϕ),  (41)

where the expansion coefficients Cnm(k) are related to the expansion coefficients

Anm(k) by Anm(k)=4πinCnm(k).  (42)

Assuming the individual coefficients Cnm(ω=kcS) to be functions of the angular frequency ω, the application of the inverse Fourier transform (denoted by custom character−1(·)) provides time domain functions











c
n
m



(
t
)


=




t

-
1




(


C
n
m



(

ω


/



c
s


)


)


=


1

2

π







-








C
n
m



(

ω

c
s


)




e
iωt


d

ω








(
43
)








for each order n and degree m, which can be collected in a single vector

c(t) by c(t)=[c00(t)c1−1(t)c10(t)c11(t)c2−2(t)c2−1(t)c20(t)c21(t)c22(t) . . . cNN−1(t)cNN(t)]T.  (44)


The position index of a time domain function cnm (t) within the vector c(t) is given by n(n+1)+1+m. The overall number of elements in vector c(t) is given by O=(N+1)2.


The final Ambisonics format provides the sampled version of c(t) using a sampling frequency fS as

{c(lTS)}l∈N={c(TS),c(2TS),c(3TS),c(4TS), . . . }  (45)

where TS=1/fS denotes the sampling period. The elements of c(lTS) are here referred to as Ambisonics coefficients. The time domain signals cnm(t) and hence the Ambisonics coefficients are real-valued.


C.1 Definition of Real-Valued Spherical Harmonics


The real-valued spherical harmonics Snm(θ,ϕ) are given by











S
n
m



(

θ
,
ϕ

)


=





(


2

n

+
1

)


4

π






(

n
-


m



)

!



(

n
+


m



)

!







P

n
,

|
m
|





(

cos





θ

)





trg
m



(
ϕ
)







(
46
)







with







trg
m



(
ϕ
)



=

{






2



cos


(

m

ϕ

)






m
>
0





1



m
=
0







-

2




sin


(

m

ϕ

)






m
<
0




.






(
47
)








The associated Legendre functions Pn,m(x) are defined as












P

n
,
m




(
x
)


=



(

1
-

x
2


)


m
2





d
m


d


x
m






P
n



(
x
)




,

m

0





(
48
)








with the Legendre polynomial Pn(x) and, unlike in the above-mentioned Williams article, without the Condon-Shortley phase term (−1)m.


C.2 Spatial Resolution of Higher Order Ambisonics


A general plane wave function x(t) arriving from a direction Ω0=(θ00)T is represented in HOA by

cnm(t)=x(t)Snm0),0≤n≤N,|m|≤n.  (49)

The corresponding spatial density of plane wave amplitudes c(t,Ω):=custom charactert−1(C(ω,Ω)) is given by










c


(

t
,
Ω

)


=


Σ

n
=
0

N



Σ

m
=

-
n


n




c
n
m



(
t
)





S
n
m



(
Ω
)







(
50
)











=


x


(
t
)






[


Σ

n
=
0

N



Σ

m
=

-
n


n




S
n
m



(

Ω
0

)





S
n
m



(
Ω
)



]





v
N



(
Θ
)




.







(
51
)







It can be seen from equation (51) that it is a product of the general plane wave function x(t) and of a spatial dispersion function νN(Θ), which can be shown to only depend on the angle Θ between Ω and Ω0 having the property

cos Θ=cos θ cos θ0+cos(ϕ−ϕ0)sin θ sin θ0.  (52)


As expected, in the limit of an infinite order, i.e., N→∞, the spatial dispersion function turns into a Dirac delta δ(·),










i
.
e
.






lim

N







v
N



(
Θ
)




=



δ


(
Θ
)



2

π


.





(
53
)







However, in the case of a finite order N, the contribution of the general plane wave from direction Ω0 is smeared to neighbouring directions, where the extent of the blurring decreases with an increasing order. A plot of the normalised function νN(Θ) for different values of N is shown in FIG. 5.


It should be pointed out that for any direction Ω the time domain behaviour of the spatial density of plane wave amplitudes is a multiple of its behaviour at any other direction. In particular, the functions c(t,Ω1) and c(t,Ω2) for some fixed directions Ω1 and Ω2 are highly correlated with each other with respect to time t.


C.3 Spherical Harmonic Transform


If the spatial density of plane wave amplitudes is discretised at a number of O spatial directions Ωo, 1≤o≤O, which are nearly uniformly distributed on the unit sphere, O directional signals c(t,Ωo) are obtained. Collecting these signals into a vector as

cSPAT(t):=[c(t,Ω1) . . . c(t,ΩO)]T,  (54)

by using equation (50) it can be verified that this vector can be computed from the continuous Ambisonics representation d(t) defined in equation (44) by a simple matrix multiplication as

cSPAT(tHc(t),  (55)

where (·)H indicates the joint transposition and conjugation, and Ψ denotes a mode-matrix defined by

Ψ:=[S1 . . . SO]  (56)
with
So:=[S00o)S1−1o)S10o)S11o) . . . SNN−1o)SNNo)].  (57)


Because the directions Ωo are nearly uniformly distributed on the unit sphere, the mode matrix is invertible in general. Hence, the continuous Ambisonics representation can be computed from the directional signals c(t,Ωo) by

c(t)=Ψ−HcSPAT(t).  (58)


Both equations constitute a transform and an inverse transform between the Ambisonics representation and the spatial domain. These transforms are here called the Spherical Harmonic Transform and the inverse Spherical Harmonic Transform.


It should be noted that since the directions Ωo are nearly uniformly distributed on the unit sphere, the approximation

ΨH≈Ψ−1  (59)

is available, which justifies the use of Ψ−1 instead of ΨH in equation (55).


Advantageously, all the mentioned relations are valid for the discrete-time domain, too.


The inventive processing can be carried out by a single processor or electronic circuit, or by several processors or electronic circuits operating in parallel and/or operating on different parts of the inventive processing.

Claims
  • 1. A method for decompressing a compressed Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) representation, the method comprising: decoding a current encoded compressed frame to provide a decoded frame of channels;re-distributing the decoded frame of channels based on an assignment vector indicating at a first index of a coefficient sequence of an ambient HOA component, and a second index of active directional signals, wherein the re-distribution creates a frame of directional signals and a frame of the ambient HOA component; andre-composing a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from the frame of directional signals and from the frame of the ambient HOA component.
  • 2. A non-transitory computer readable storage medium containing instructions that when executed by a processor perform the method according to claim 1.
  • 3. An apparatus for decompressing a Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) representation, the apparatus comprising: a processor for decoding a current encoded compressed frame to provide a decoded frame of channels;wherein the processor is further configured to re-distribute the decoded frame of channels based on an assignment vector indicating at first index of a coefficient sequence of an ambient HOA component, and a second index of active directional signals, wherein the re-distribution creates a frame of directional signals and a frame of the ambient HOA component; andwherein the processor is further configured to re-compose a current decompressed frame of the HOA representation from the frame of directional signals and from the frame of the ambient HOA component.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
13305558 Apr 2013 EP regional
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/379,091, filed Apr. 9, 2019, which is division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/876,442, filed Jan. 22, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,264,382, which is division of Ser. No. 15/650,674, filed Jul. 14, 2017, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,913,063, which is continuation of Ser. No. 14/787,978, filed Oct. 29, 2015, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,736,607, which is U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2014/058380, filed Apr. 24, 2014, which claims priority to European Patent Application No. 13305558.2, filed Apr. 29, 2013, each of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.

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Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20200304931 A1 Sep 2020 US
Divisions (3)
Number Date Country
Parent 16379091 Apr 2019 US
Child 16841203 US
Parent 15876442 Jan 2018 US
Child 16379091 US
Parent 15650674 Jul 2017 US
Child 15876442 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 14787978 US
Child 15650674 US