The present invention relates to an apparatus and method for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals and an apparatus and method for processing a plurality of real-valued subband signals, especially in the field of encoding and decoding of audio signals.
It has been shown in [P. Ekstrand, “Bandwidth extension of audio signals by spectral hand replication”, Proc. 1st IEEE Benelux Workshop on Model based Processing and Coding of Audio (MPCA-2002), pp. 53-58, Leuven, Belgium, 2002], that a complex-exponential modulated filter bank is an excellent tool for spectral envelope adjustment of audio signals. One application of this feature is audio coding based on Spectral Band Replication (SBR). Other fruitful applications of a complex filter bank include frequency selective panning and spatialization for parametric stereo, see [E. Schuijers, J. Breebart, H. Purnhagen, J. Engdegård: “Low complexity parametric stereo coding”, Proc. 116th AES convention, 2004. paper 6073] and parametric multichannel coding, see [J. Herre et al.: “The reference model architecture for MPEG spatial audio coding”, Proc. 118th AES convention, 2005, paper 6447]. In those applications the frequency resolution of the complex filter bank is further enhanced at low frequencies by means of sub-subband filtering. The combined hybrid filter bank hereby achieves a frequency resolution that enables the processing of spatial cues at a spectral resolution which closely follows the spectral resolution of the binaural auditory system. The additional filtering introduces no aliasing in itself, even if modifications are applied, so the quality of the hybrid filter bank is determined by the aliasing properties of the first filter bank.
If restraints on computational complexity prevent the usage of a complex exponential modulated filter bank, and only allows for a cosine modulated (real-valued) implementation, severe aliasing is encountered when the filter bank is used for spectral envelope adjustment. As shown in [O. Shamida et al.: “A low power SBR algorithm for the MPEG-4 audio standard and its DSP implementation”, Proc. 116th AES convention, 2004, paper 6048] adaptive subband gain grouping (or gain locking) can alleviate the aliasing to some extent. However, this method works best when only high frequency components of the signal have to be modified. For panning purposes in parametric multichannel coding, the amount of gain locking necessary to render the aliasing at lower frequencies inaudible will strongly reduce the frequency selectivity of the filter bank tool and will in practice render the additional frequency selectivity of a hybrid filter bank unreachable. The result is a rather narrow sound impression and problems with correct sound source placement. A much better compromise between quality and complexity would be obtained if the complex signal processing could be kept only for the perceptually more important lower frequencies.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a more efficient concept for providing a signal allowing a manipulation with better quality and a more efficient concept for reducing a signal with less distortions.
The present invention describes an apparatus for processing a plurality of real-valued subband signals, the plurality of real-valued subband signals comprising a first real-valued subband signal and a second real-valued subband signal to provide at least a complex-valued subband signal, comprising a multiband filter for providing an intermediate real-valued subband signal by filtering the first subband signal to provide a first filtered subband signal and the second real-valued subband signal to obtain a second filtered subband signal and by combining the first and the second filtered subband signals to provide the real-valued intermediate subband signal and a calculator for providing the complex-valued subband signal by combining a real-valued subband signal from the plurality of real-valued subband signals as the real part of the complex-valued subband signal and the intermediate subband signal as an imaginary part of the complex-valued subband signal.
As a second aspect of the present invention, the present invention describes an apparatus for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals, the plurality of complex-valued subband signals comprising a first complex-valued subband signal and a second complex-valued subband signal to obtain a real-valued subband signal, comprising an extractor for extracting from the first complex-valued subband signal a first imaginary part for extracting from the second complex-valued subband signal a second imaginary part and for extracting from the first, the second or a third complex-valued subband signal of the plurality of complex-valued subband signals a real part, a multiband filter for providing a real-valued intermediate subband signal by filtering the first imaginary part to provide a first filtered imaginary part signal, by filtering the second imaginary part to provide a second filtered imaginary part signal and by combining the first and the second filtered imaginary part signals to provide the intermediate subband signal, and a calculator for providing the real-valued subband signal by combining the real part signal and the intermediate signal.
The present invention is based on the finding that a plurality of real-valued subband signals can be processed to provide at least one complex-valued subband signal allowing a manipulation with a better quality than a manipulation of the plurality of real-valued subband signals, wherein a computational complexity of the processing of the plurality of real-valued subband signals is only slightly increased. To be more precise, the present invention is based on the fact that a plurality of real-valued subband signals can be processed by a multiband filter and by a calculator to obtain a complex-valued subband signal which can be manipulated far more easily without creating a significant number of distortions and minimal aliasing as compared to directly manipulating the plurality of real-valued subband signals.
In one embodiment of the present invention, an inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of real-valued subband signals is described, which provides a plurality of complex-valued subband signals from a subset of the plurality of real-valued subband signals, wherein a second subset of the plurality of real-valued subband signals is provided as a further plurality of real-valued subband signals without being processed into a corresponding number of complex-valued subband signals. Hence, this embodiment represents a partially complex modulated analysis filter bank, wherein the complex-valued subband signals will have the same advantages as corresponding subband signals from a complex exponentially modulated filter banks in terms of stability of energy estimation at minimal aliasing arising from linear time invariant modifications such as a level of adjustment and further filtering. Furthermore, as an additional advantage, the computational complexity as compared with a complex filter bank for processing complex-valued signals is significantly reduced.
As will be explained later, further embodiments of the present invention can also comprise modifications and modifier introducing time variance and/or non-linear manipulations. Examples for such embodiments come from the fields of high quality SBR, varying applications of spatial parameters and other applications. In these embodiments, all advantageous properties of the manipulators of the corresponding complex bank are present in the complex part of the partially complex filter bank of the embodiments of the present invention.
In a further embodiment of the present invention the further plurality of real-valued subband signals, passed on by the inventive apparatus for processing the plurality of real-valued subband signals is delayed by a delayer to ensure a timely synchronicity with respect to the complex-valued subband signals output by the inventive apparatus.
The second aspect of the present invention is based on the finding that a plurality of complex-valued subband signals can be more efficiently reduced to a real-valued subband signal with less distortions and minimal aliasing by extracting from at least two complex-valued subband signals real-valued imaginary parts of the at least two complex-valued subband signals and by extracting from the first, the second or a third complex-valued subband signal a real part by an extractor, by a multiband filter for providing an intermediate signal based on the imaginary parts and by a calculator for providing the real-valued subband signal by combining the real part signal and the intermediate signal. To be more precise, the present invention is based on the finding that prior to an optional real synthesis another multiband filter converts the complex-valued subband signals back to real-valued subband signals, wherein the overall quality of reconstruction and signal processing behavior is in line with that of a complex filter bank.
Depending on the concrete implementations of the embodiments, the extractor can also be implemented as a separator, if for instance more than just one real-valued subband signal is to be provided. In this case it might be useful to extract from all complex-valued subband-d signals their appropriate real parts and imaginary parts for further processing.
On the contrary, even if only a single real-valued subband signal is to be obtained based on three or more different complex-valued subband signals, the extractor can be implemented as a separator, which separates each complex-valued subband signal into both its real parts and imaginary parts. In this case, the imaginary part signals and the real part signals not required in the further process can simply be neglected. Hence, the terms separator and extractor can be synonymously used in the framework of the present application.
Furthermore, in the frame work of the present application, imaginary part signals and imaginary parts as well as real parts and real part signals refer to both signals having values, which correspond to either an imaginary part or a real part of a value of complex subband signals. In this context, it should also be noted that in principle both, any imaginary part signal and any real part signal can be either real-valued or complex-valued.
In one embodiment of the present invention, an inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals is also provided with a plurality of real-valued subband signals, wherein the plurality of complex-valued subband signals is processed as described in the above terms and wherein the plurality of real-valued subband signals is provided in an unfiltered form at an output of the apparatus. Hence, this embodiment forms a partially complex modulated synthesis filter bank. A major advantage of this embodiment is that the overall quality of reconstruction and signal processing behavior is in line with that of a complex filter bank with respect to the plurality of complex-valued subband signals and in line with that of a real filter bank in the remaining frequency range represented by the plurality of real-valued subband signals. As an additional advantage of the embodiments, the computational complexity is only, slightly increased compared to that of a real-valued filter bank. Furthermore, as an additional advantage of the embodiments a seamless transition between the two frequency ranges represented by both, the plurality of complex-valued subband signals and the plurality of real-valued subband signals arises from a particular edge band treatment. Furthermore, as an additional advantage, the computational complexity as compared with a complex filter bank for processing complex-valued signals is significantly reduced.
A further embodiment of the present invention describes a system which combines both, an inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of real-valued subband signals and an inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals, wherein both inventive apparatuses also pass on a further plurality of real-valued subband signals. In between the two inventive apparatuses a first and a second manipulator modify the plurality of complex-valued subband signals output by the inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of real-valued subband signals and modify the further plurality of real-valued subband signals, respectively. The first and the second manipulator can perform linear time invariant modifications such as an envelope adjustment or a filtering. As a consequence, in the system described, the overall quality of reconstruction and signal processing behavior is with respect to the frequency range represented by the plurality of complex-valued subband signals in line with that of a complex filter bank and with respect to the frequency range represented by the further plurality of real-valued subband signals in line with that of a real filter bank, leading to a manipulation of the signals with a far better quality as compared to directly modifying the plurality of real-valued subband signals, while the computational complexity is only slightly increased. As outlined before and more closely explained later, the manipulators of other embodiments are not limited to linear and/or time invariant manipulations.
In a further embodiment of the inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals a further plurality of real-valued subband signals is passed on in a delayed form by employing a delayer to ensure a timely synchronicity with respect to the real-valued subband signal output by the inventive apparatus for processing a plurality of complex-valued subband signals.
The present invention will now be described by way of illustrative examples, not limiting the scope or spirit of the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings. Preferred embodiments of the present invention are subsequently described by the following drawings, wherein:
The below-described embodiments are merely illustrative for the principles of the present invention of a partially complex modulated filter bank. It is understood that modifications and variations of the arrangements and the details described herein will be apparent to others skilled in the art. It is the intent, therefore, to be limited only by the scope of the impending patent claims and not by the specific details presented by way of description and explanation of the embodiments herein.
Nevertheless, as described above, the separator 309 can also be implemented as an extractor, which is adapted for not separating all complex-valued subband signals into real part signals and imaginary part signals. Hence, the separator 309 is also synonymously referred to as extractor 309 for extracting real part signals (real parts) and imaginary part signals (imaginary parts) from complex-valued subband signals.
The fixed real gain adjuster 301, the separator 309, which comprises the real part extractor 302 and the imaginary part extractor 303, the delayer 304, the delayer 305, the multiband filter 306 and the adder 307 together form an inventive complex to real converter 310, which is capable of converting K complex-valued subband signals into K real-valued subband signals and providing (L−K) real-valued subband signals in a delayed form at an output of the complex to real converter 310.
Moreover, similarities of the filters Fm,−1 and Fm,1 can be exploited to reduce complexity even further. The particularly small values of q(m) and p(m) as described by (1) and (2) can be used when prototype filter of the cosine modulated filter bank has a sufficiently high degree of stop band attenuation. This implicitly requires a certain minimal length of prototype filter. For shorter prototype filters, the values of q(m) and p(m) have to be increased. However, the method taught by the present invention remains computationally efficient since the length of filters Fm,r is proportional to the length of the prototype filter.
The filters implemented in the multiband filter 401 can be in principle all kinds of filters with all kinds of filter characteristics. In the embodiment shown in
The embodiments shown in
In other words, each subband or subband signal is associated with both, an index n or m and a center frequency of the corresponding subband. Hence, the subband signals or rather the subbands can be arranged according to the center frequencies associated with the subband signals in such a way that an increasing index can, for example, correspond to a higher frequency.
Hence, the present invention relates to systems comprising equalization, spectral envelope adjustment, frequency selective panning, or frequency selective spatialization of audio signals using a downsampled real-valued subband filter bank. It permits suppression of aliasing for a selected frequency range by transforming a corresponding subset of subband signals into complex-valued subband signals. Assuming that the aliasing outside the selected frequency range is less noticeable or can be alleviated by other methods, this permits large savings in computational effort in comparison to the use of a complex-valued filter bank.
Modulated Filter Banks
For ease of computations a complex exponential modulated L-band filter bank will be modeled here by a continuous time windowed transform using the synthesis waveforms
en,k(t)=en(t−k), (3)
where n, k are integers with n≧0 and
en(t)=en,0(t)=v(t)exp[iπ(n+1/2)(t+1/2)]. (4)
The window function v(t) is assumed to be real valued. By splitting en(t)=cn(t)+isn(t) into real and imaginary parts, one obtains the synthesis waveforms for cosine and sine modulated filter banks,
Results for discrete-time signals and filter banks with L subbands are obtained by suitable sampling of the t-variable with spacing 1/L. Define the inner product between signals by
where the star denotes complex conjugation. For discrete-time signals the integral is replaced by a summation. The operation of a cosine and sine modulated filter bank analysis of a signal x(t) is then described by
Given subband signals {tilde over (α)}n, {tilde over (β)}n, the corresponding synthesis operations are
For discrete-time signals, the summation over the subband index n is limited to (L−1). It is well known from the theory of cosine/sine modulated filter banks and lapped transforms that the window function v(t) can be designed such that the combined analysis and synthesis operations lead to perfect reconstruction yc=ys=x for unmodified subband signals {tilde over (α)}n=αn, {tilde over (β)}hd n=βn. For near perfect reconstruction designs those equalities will be approximate.
The operation of a complex exponential modulated filter bank as taught by PCT/SE02/00626 “Aliasing reduction using complex exponential modulated filter banks” can be described by the complex analysis,
where ga is a fixed real analysis gain factor. The synthesis from complex subband signals {tilde over (γ)}n={tilde over (α)}n−i{tilde over (β)}n is defined by
where g is a fixed real synthesis gain factor. Assuming that the complex subband signals are unmodified {tilde over (γ)}n=γn and that the cosine and sine modulated banks have perfect reconstruction, one finds from (8) and (9) that
ye=gsga(yc+ys)=2gsgax. (11)
Hence perfect reconstruction is achieved if
gags=1/2. (12)
A particularly attractive choice of fixed gains leading to energy preservation of the complex subband representation is ga=gs=1/√{square root over (2)}.
It is immediate that in the complex case, deviations from the specific modulation described by (4) by a fixed phase factor for each subband can be permitted without changing the reconstruction properties, since the modification of the complex subband signals in (9) and (10) will cancel out. The complex exponential modulated filter bank is oversampled by a factor of two. With a proper window design this enables virtually alias free envelope adjustment as shown in PCT/SE02/00626 “Aliasing reduction using complex exponential modulated filter banks”. Such designs are often easier to achieve by abandoning the strictly perfect reconstruction framework described above in favor of near-perfect reconstruction.
Multiband Filtering
Assuming that only the cosine modulated bank analysis αn(k) of (7) is available, the corresponding sine modulated bank analysis βm(l) can be obtained by combining a cosine bank synthesis step and a sine bank analysis. One finds that
where a change of time variable in the inner product leads to
Hence the summation with respect to k in (13) corresponds to a filtering and the overall structure is recognized as a version of the multiband filtering depicted in
After a substitution t|→t+λ/2, the first term of (15) can be expanded into
With a symmetric window v(−t)=v(t), the imaginary part of the integral in (16) vanishes, such that
with the definition
This expression is an even function of both μ and λ. For suitable designs of windows one can assume that hμ vanishes for |μ|>1. In the discrete-time case, the integral in (18) is to be replaced by a summation over integers v′ with t=(v+θ)/L, where L is the number of subbands and θ is an offset value either equal to 0 or 1/2. The discrete-time counterpart of (18) is periodic in μ with period 2L for θ=0 and antiperiodic in μ with period 2L for θ=1/2. Inserting n=m+r in (15) yields
Referring to 402m in
can be used as the impulse response of the filter Fm,r if L=K is inserted in the above computations. Assuming hμ vanishes except for μ=2Kκ+σ where κ is an integer and σΣ{−1,0,1}, it follows that the second term of (19) only gives a contribution for m=0 and m=(K−1). These edge cases are important since they contain the key to near invertibility of the multiband filter 401. Apart from the trivial modulations of (19), only two prototype filters h0, h1 have to be considered, and an inspection of (19) shows that only the odd samples of h0 come into play. Moreover it is clear for those skilled in the art that the special modulations of (19) and the similarity of the filters fm+1,−1 and fm−1,1 allows for a very efficient implementation of the multiband filter in polyphase form. A more detailed description of such an embodiment will be presented in the further course of this application.
For practical designs it is advantageous to abandon the discretized inner product (18) for the design of those prototype filters. Instead) for a chosen integer N the filters fm,r are designed to give the best approximation
This gives a second, more direct path to the sine modulated bank analysis
where the star denotes convolution. Moreover, expanding the sine synthesis operation (8) by inserting (20) and collecting the cosine terms leads to
such that the synthesis multiband filter 306 also has the structure of 401 with filters replaced by Gm,r with impulse responses gm,r(λ)=fm+r,−r(−λ). The same result would also follow from interchanging the role of cosine and sine modulation in the derivations above.
The total computational complexity of the multiband filter is proportional to N·K as operations per subband sample period, that is, N·K/L operations per digital audio sample. When K<<L this leads to a considerable saving in comparison to additional sine modulation required for a full complex modulated filter bank.
Compared to the application of a purely real or purely complex modulated filter bank and additional delay of N subband samples is introduced by the multiband filter in both the analysis and the synthesis step. This is compensated for by delaying all the subband samples which do not pass the multiband filter by a delay of N subband samples in 202, 203, 304, and 305. In the case where the modification 103 comprises a sub-subband filtering as described in [E. Schuijers, J. Breebart, H. Purnhagen, J. Engdegård: “Low complexity parametric stereo coding”, Proc. 116th AES convention, 2204, paper 6073], the sub-subband filters can be combined with the multiband filter 204 in order to enable a reduction of the total delay by means of approximating the combined impulse responses.
If the selected K complex subbands are the first K of a total of L subbands, the multiband filter emulates the effect of a synthesis of a filter bank with K subbands to a time domain of K/L times the original sampling frequency followed by an analysis with a filter bank with K subbands. Such a detour has the disadvantage of leading to a longer multiband filter delay than what can be achieved with the design method taught by the current invention. For applications where the number of analysis audio channels are much smaller than the number of synthesis channels, the analysis delay of the multiband filter can be avoided altogether at the price of higher computational complexity simply by performing the partially complex analysis 101 by a true complex modulated filter bank analysis with L subbands and discarding the imaginary part of the last (L−K) subbands. However, in order to make the combination with the synthesis of
The present invention relates to systems comprising equalization, spectral envelope adjustment, frequency selective panning, or frequency selective spatialization of audio signals using a downsampled real-valued subband filter bank. It permits suppression of aliasing for a selected frequency range by transforming a corresponding subset of subband signals into complex-valued subband signals. Assuming that the aliasing outside the selected frequency range is less noticeable or can be alleviated b other methods, this permits large savings in computational effort in comparison to the use of a complex-valued filter bank.
The present invention teaches how to obtain complex representation of a signal for a selected frequency range, at a computational complexity which is only slightly larger than that of a real-valued filter bank. An efficient multiband filter is applied to selected subbands of the real filter bank analysis in order to produce imaginary parts of those subband signals. The result is a partially complex modulated filter bank analysis. The complexified subbands will have the same advantages as the corresponding subbands from a complex exponentially modulated filter bank in tells of stability of energy estimation and minimal aliasing arising from linear time invariant modifications such as envelope adjustment and filtering. Prior to the real synthesis, another multiband filter converts the complex subband samples back to real subband samples. The overall quality of reconstruction and signal processing behavior is in line with that of a complex filter bank in the complexified frequency range and in line with that of a real filter bank in the remaining frequency range. A seamless transition between the two ranges arises implicitly from a particular edge band treatment taught by the present invention.
In the frame work of the modifiers or manipulators 102, 103 time varying application of spatial parameters (e.g. MPEG Surround or parametric stereo) by means of time interpolated gains or matrices should be mentioned. In the case of time invariant modifications or manipulations the application to envelope adjustment or equalization with a feature to not introduce aliasing is important. Hence, definitions concerning an introduction of aliasing are mainly focused on time invariant cases.
Nevertheless, introducing time variance for instance in the frame work of the manipulators or modifiers 102, 103 shown in
To summarize, in the frame work of the modifiers or manipulators 102, 103, any manipulation is certainly possible and relevant as long as it requires the time frequency resolution of the resulting (partially complex) filter bank. Hence, all advantages of the manipulations 103 of a corresponding complex bank are also present in the complex part of the partially complex filter bank.
The embodiment of the present invention described in
In the following sections an implementation of a low power version of a spatial audio tool is outlined. The low power spatial audio tool operates on real-value subband domain signals above the K-th QMF subband (QMF=quadrature mirror-filter), where K is a positive integer. The integer K is chosen according to the specific needs and specifications of the implementation intended. In other words, the integer K is given by details of the intended implementation, such as a bitstream info. A real-valued QMF filter bank is used in combination with an inventive real to complex converter to achieve a partially complex subband domain representation. Furthermore, the low-power spatial audio tool may incorporate additional modules in order to reduce aliasing introduced due to the real-valued processing.
Following this short introduction, the low power spatial audio coding system employs a time/frequency transform according to
The real QMF analysis bank 500 is at an input provided with time domain input signals {tilde over (x)} and provides at an output real-valued QMF signals {circumflex over (x)}realn,m to the real to complex converter 520. The real to complex converter 520 turns the QMF signals into partially complex samples {circumflex over (x)}n,m, which are then provided to the Nyquist analysis banks 530, which in turn produce hybrid subband domain signals xn,m.
Apart from the regular mode of operation of this time/frequency transformer, wherein the spatial audio decoder is set with time domain samples {tilde over (x)}, also (intermediate) real-valued (QMF) subband domain samples {circumflex over (x)}realn,m, for instance from a low-complexity HE-AAC decoder can be taken. To be more precise, in that case the subband domain samples prior to HE-AAC QMF synthesis are taken, as laid out in [ISO/IEC 14496-3:2001/AND1:2003]. To enable also these QMF input signals {circumflex over (x)}realn,m to be fed to the inventive real to complex converter 520, the optical switch 510 is integrated into the time/frequency transformer shown in
The real QMF samples, either provided in the form of QMF input signals or via the real QMF analysis bank 500, are converted to partially complex samples {circumflex over (x)}n,m by the real to complex converter 520, which will be described in more detail with reference to
The filter banks, or to be more precise, the real QMF analysis bank 500 and the real QMF synthesis bank 570 will now be described in more detail. For instance, for low power MPEG surround systems, real-valued QMF filter banks are used. In this case, the analysis filter bank 500 uses 64 channels as is outlined below. The synthesis filter bank 570 also has 64 channels and is identical to the filter bank used in low complexity HE-AAC systems as they are described in section 4.6.18.8.2.3 of ISO/IEC 14496-3. Although the following description is based on 64 channels (integer L=64), the present invention and its embodiments are not limited to using 64 channels or an appropriate number of real-valued or complex-valued subband signals. In principle, an arbitrary number of channels or rather real-valued or complex-valued subband signals can be used in context with embodiments of the present invention. However, if a different number of channels is used, the appropriate parameters of the embodiments would also have to be adapted accordingly. The real-valued QMF analysis bank 500, shown in
In step S130 (the samples of the array x are multiplied by a set of coefficients of a window or rather a window function c. The window c is also implemented as an array c with 640 elements with indices ranging from n=0, . . . , 639. This multiplication is done in step S130 by introducing a new intermediate array z with 640 elements according to
z(n)=x(n)·c(n), n=0, . . . , 639 (23)
wherein the window coefficients c[0], . . . , c[639] can be found in Table 4.A.87 of ISO/IEC 14496-3.
In a following step S140 the samples represented by the intermediate array z are summed up according to
creating a new intermediate 128-element array u. Equation 24 is also shown in the flowchart of
In the following step S150 new 64 subband samples are calculated by a matrix operation M·u with a matrix M, wherein the elements of the matrix M are given by
before the method of filtering as in a step S160.
Hence, every loop of the method shown in the flowchart of
While
The subset of K real-valued subband signals is provided to both a multiband filter 600 and an optional first delayer 610. The multiband filter 600 provides at an output a set of K real-valued intermediate subband signals which are provided to a multiplier 620, which multiplies each of the real-valued intermediate subband signals with a negative imaginary unit (−i). An output of the multiplier 620 is provided to an adder 630 which also receives the K real-valued subband signals in a delayed form from the delayer 610. An output of the adder 630 is further provided to a fixed gain adjuster 640. The fixed gain adjuster 640 adjusts the level of each subband signal provided at its input by multiplying the corresponding subband signal with a real-valued constant. It should be noted that the fixed gain adjuster 640 is an optional component, which is not essential for the inventive real to complex converter 520. As an output of the fixed gain adjuster 640, if implemented, or at the output of the adder 630 the real to complex converter 520 provides K complex-valued subband signals or rather K complex subbands.
The adder 630 and the multiplier 620 form together a calculator 650, which provides the complex-valued subband signal which can optionally be gain adjusted by the fixed gain adjuster 640. To be more precise, the calculator 650 combines a real-valued subband signal as a real part of the complex-valued subband signal output by the calculator 650 and the intermediate signal output by the multiband filter 600 as an imaginary part of the complex-valued subband signal.
In this context, it is important to note that the first delayer 610 is also an optional component which ensures that a possible time delay caused by the multiband filter 600 is correctly taken into account before the calculator 650 combines the intermediate signal output by the multiband filter 600 and the real-valued subband signals provided to the real to complex converter 520.
As an optional component the real to complex converter 520 also comprises a second delayer 600 which also ensures that the possible time delay caused by the multiband filter 600 does not show up in the (64−K) real-valued subband signals of the further plurality of real-valued subband signals. In order to do this, the second delayer 660 is connected in between the (64−K) real-valued subband signals, which pass the real to complex converter 520 in an unaltered way. It is important to note that the real to complex converter 520 does not necessarily comprise any real-valued subband signals being transmitted in an unaltered or only delayed form, as the integer K can also assume the value K=64, so that no real-valued subband signal pass the real to complex converter 520 in the described way.
Hence, the real QMF subband signals are transformed into partially complex QMF subbands by the real to complex converter 520 as shown in
The second group comprising (64−K) real subband signals are just delayed by the optional second delayer 660, if they exist at all. The role of both optional delayers 610, 660 is to compensate for a possible delay introduced by the multiband filter 600. The length of this delay is typically related to an order of a set of multiband filters comprised in the multiband filter 600. Typically, the length of this delay is half of the order of the multiband prototype filters. This means that the delay imposed by the two optional delayers 610, 660 in the embodiment more closely specified below amounts to five subband samples. As already laid out in the sections above, especially with respect to the description of the multiband filter in
The term fm,r[v] represents the filters or rather the filter functions, {circumflex over (x)}real,kn−v,m+r represents the real-valued subband signals provided at the input of the multiband filter. Furthermore, the QMF subband summation limits are defined by
The filters fm,r[v] are derived from two prototype filters of the multiband filter 600, which are mainly determined by two multiband filter prototype coefficients av[n], wherein v=0,1. To be more precise, the filters or rather the filter functions fm,r[v] fulfill the relation
wherein the multiband filter prototype coefficients a0[v] fulfills the relations given in the following Table 1:
Furthermore, the multiband filter prototype coefficients a1[v] fulfill the relations given in the following Table 2:
In other words, the filters fm,r[v] are derived from the prototype filters as given in Tables 1 and 2 and via Equation 29.
The output {circumflex over (x)}imag,kn,m of the multiband filter 600 is combined by the calculator 650 with a delayed real-valued QMF subband sample {circumflex over (x)}real,kn−5,m to form the partially complex QMF subband samples {circumflex over (x)}kn,m, as illustrated in
wherein in the superscripts (n−5) of the real-valued QMF subband samples {circumflex over (x)}real,kn−5,m the influence of the two delayers 610, 660 is illustrated. As mentioned before, the length of this delay is typically half of the order of the multiband prototype filter coefficients av[n] as given in Tables 1 and 2. This amounts to five subband samples.
In a further embodiment of the present invention the multiband filter prototypes or rather multiband filter prototype coefficients av[n] with v=0,1 fulfil the relations given in the following Tables 3 and 4:
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the multiband filter prototype coefficients av[n] with v=0,1 comprise the values given in the following Table 5:
As outlined in the context of the mathematical background, especially in the context of equations (18) to (20), and the properties of the expression in equation (18) mentioned above, the resulting structure of the coefficients, av[n] comprise some symmetries. To be more exact, as also the coefficients given in table 5 above show, the coefficients of av[n] of table 5 fulfill the symmetry relations
av[10−n]=av[n] (30a)
for v=0, 1 and n=0, . . . , 10 and
a0[2n+1]=0 (30b)
for n=0, . . . , 4.
Referring to
The complex to real converter 560 shown in
The fixed gain adjuster 700 is connected to a separator 710 or an extractor 710, as explained above, which comprises a real part extractor 720 and an imaginary part extractor 730 which both receive the output of the fixed gain adjuster 700 as an input. If, however, the optional fixed gain adjuster 700 is not implemented, the separator 710 or extractor 710 receives the K complex-valued subband signals directly. The real part extractor 720 is connected to an optional first delayer 740, while the imaginary part extractor 730 is connected to a multiband filter 750. Both, the first delayer 740 and the multiband filter 750 are connected to a calculator 760 which provides at an output K real-valued subband signals as an output of the inventive complex to real converter 560.
Furthermore, the complex to real converter 560 is provided with (64−K) real-valued subband signals, which are also in
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The multiband filter 750 proceeds to operate on the imaginary part signals {circumflex over (v)}kn,m, which are real-valued signals, by performing the following mathematical operation:
The multiband filter 750 provides a set of K real-valued intermediate subband signals ŵkm,n. In Equation 32 the QMF subband summation limits p(m) and q(m) are defined by Equations 27 and 28 of the previous sections, respectively. Furthermore, the filters or rather filter functions gm,r[v] are derived from the prototype fitters or rather the prototype filter coefficients as laid out in Tables 1 and 2, Tables 3 and 4 or in Table 5 via the relation:
To obtain the QMF signals ŷreal,kn,m with respect to the K complex-valued subband signals processed by the separator 710 or extractor 710 and the multiband filter 750, the calculator 760 sums both, the intermediate subband signals output by the multiband filter 750 and the real part signals output by the separator 710 in the delayed form.
The remaining (64−K) real-valued subband signals are passed on in a delayed form due to the influence of the second delayer 770. To summarize, the QMF signals ŷreal,kn,m to be fed into the real QMF synthesis bank 570 of
As already discussed in context with Equation 30, the superscript (n−5) of both the real part signal ûkn−5,m and the real-valued subband signals ŷkn−5,m is caused by the first delayer 740 and the second delayer 670, wherein typically the length of their delays is once again half of the order of the multiband prototype filters av[n] as given in the tables 1 to 5. As explained, this amounts to five subband samples.
Also, as explained in context with
The present invention is also not limited to multiband filters 204, 306, 401, 600, 750 which operate on a symmetric distribution of subband signals in relation to the index m over subband. In other words, the present invention is not limited to multiband filters, which combine subband signals or other signals with indices which are symmetrically distributed with respect to the index of the intermediate subband signal output by the multiband filter, e.g. starting from a subband with index m and an integer m′ by using the subbands with indices m, (m+m′) and (m−m′). Apart from the obvious restriction of subband signals with indices so small or so big that the symmetric choice of subband signals is out of the questions, the multiband filters can be designed to use individual combinations of also the number of subband signals processed to obtain the intermediate subband signals can deviate from three. For instance, if a different filter with different filter coefficients is chosen, as indicated above, it might be advisable to use more than a total number of three subband signals. Furthermore, the multiband filters can be designed in a way to provide or rather output intermediate subband signals with indices, which do not correspond to indices of subband signals provided to the multiband filter. In other words, if the multiband filter outputs an intermediate subband signal with an index m, a subband signal having the same index is not necessarily required as a subband signal provided to the multiband filter.
Additionally, a system comprising one or both converters 520, 560 can comprise additional aliasing detectors and/or aliasing equalizers or rather aliasing equalization means.
Depending on certain implementation requirements of the inventive methods, the inventive method can be implemented in hardware or in software. The implementation can be performed using a digital storage medium, in particular a disc, CD or a DVD having electronically readable control signals stored thereon which cooperate with a programmable computer system such that the inventive methods are performed. Generally, the present invention is, therefore, a computer program product with a program code stored on a machine-readable carrier, the program code being operative for performing the inventive method when the computer program product runs on a computer. In other words, the inventive methods are, therefore, a computer program having a program code for performing at least one of the inventive methods when the computer program runs on a computer.
While the foregoing has been particularly shown and described with reference to particular embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various other changes in the form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope thereof. It is to be understood that various changes may be made in adapting to different embodiments without departing from the broader concept disclosed herein and comprehended by the claims that follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0502049 | Sep 2005 | SE | national |
This Application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/733,682, entitled Partially Complex Modulated Filter Bank, filed 3 Nov. 2005, and also claims priority to Swedish Patent Application No. 0502049-0, filed 16 Sep. 2005, both of which are incorporated herein in their entirety by this reference thereto.
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