The present invention relates in general to simulating sound system reproduction and more particularly concerns demonstrating the sound performance of audio systems or loudspeaker systems which are not physically present as they would sound in an environment which is not also physically present, and still more particularly to a novel, self-contained demonstration apparatus for transducing by near-field reproduction binaurally encoded signals processed for loudspeaker reproduction, such processing optionally incorporating transaural crosstalk cancellation.
For background, reference is made to U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,342 entitled HEAD DIFFRACTION COMPENSATED STEREO SYSTEM and a paper of David Griesinger entitled “Theory and Design of a Digital Audio Signal Processor for Home Use” in J. Audio Eng. Soc., Vol. 37, No. 1/2 1989 January/February p. 40, which refers to work of Schroeder using interaural crosstalk elimination to play binaural recordings made in actual concert halls. Reference is also made to papers of M. R. Schroeder et al. entitled “Comparative study of European concert halls: correlation of subjective preference with geometric and acoustic parameters” in J. Acoust. Soc. Am., Vol. 56, No. 4, October 1974 p. 1195, of Moller entitled “Reproduction of Artificial-Head Recordings through Loudspeakers” in J. Audio Eng. Soc., Vol. 37 No. 1/2 1989 January/February p. 30, of Cooper et al. entitled “Prospects for Transaural Recording” in J. Audio Eng. Soc. Vol. 37, No. 1/2, 1989 January/February p. 3, of Jerry Bauck and Duane H. Cooper entitled “Generalized Transaural Stereo and Applications,” presented at the 20th Convention of the Audio Engineering Society, San Francisco, October 1992, U.S. Pat. No. 3,236,949 entitled APPARENT SOUND SOURCE TRANSLATOR, U.S. Pat. No. 4,975,974 entitled HEAD DIFFRACTION COMPENSATED STEREO SYSTEM WITH OPTIMAL EQUALIZATION, and the letter of Salava entitled “Transaural Stereo and Near-Field Listening” in J. Audio Eng. Soc., Vol. 38, No. 1/2 1990 January/February p. 40. Reference is also made to an article in THE WALL STREET JOURNAL for Oct. 19, 1994, describing the Bose AUDITIONER sound demonstrating system and the publicly available Bose loudspeaker demonstrator that allows users to select actual loudspeaker equipment for a listening demonstration.
It is an important object of this invention to provide improved apparatus and techniques for demonstrating audio equipment or other sound sources in varying acoustic environments without that equipment, other sound source, or environment actually being present.
A feature of the invention is that it allows those seeking to purchase audio equipment or those interested in hearing demonstrations of sound producing or sound reproducing equipment to obtain the desired demonstrations without the usual constraints of space and equipment setup. For example, an audio equipment retailer may not have sufficient space to demonstrate several models of loudspeakers; or the space available may not be satisfactory for such demonstrations because of room acoustics or background noise. This invention is not subject to these limitations, and also makes it possible to obtain repeatable and accurate sound demonstrations in locations previously unsuitable for such demonstrations. Furthermore, the invention allows demonstrating how selected audio equipment would sound in a room very much like the listener's room at home.
According to the invention, there is a source of binaurally encoded signals processed for loudspeaker reproduction in a manner that achieves a fully realistic, three-dimensional auditory illusion for a single listener, that is externalized from the listener's head and that is nearly indistinguishable from the listening experience that would be perceived were the listener to be listening to the actual sound source in the actual environment that the system is simulating. The various means to create binaurally encoded signals and process them for loudspeaker reproduction are known to those skilled in the art. An exemplary method employing filtering to cancel unwanted acoustic signal crosstalk between the left and right ears is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,975,954 entitled HEAD DIFFRACTION COMPENSATED STEREO SYSTEM WITH OPTIMAL EQUALIZATION, pages 1–3.
According to a specific feature of the invention, there is a selector that allows the listener to select specific audio equipment, such as a specific loudspeaker system, to be simulated. According to another feature of the invention, there is a simulated environment selector that allows the listener to select the environment in which the sound performance of the selected audio equipment is to be simulated. More specifically, the environment selector allows the listener to specify the most important characteristics of a selected listening room so as to allow an auditory experience to be produced by the invention which is very close to that which would be experienced in the actual selected listening room with the actual selected audio equipment playing there. According to another feature of the invention, there is a sound source selector that allows the listener to select the program material, typically music, to be heard over the simulated selected audio equipment in the simulated selected listening room.
According to another feature of the invention, there is structure constructed and arranged to comfortably and accurately locate the listener so that the head of the listener is within the range of correct locations relative to a pair of electroacoustical transducers reproducing the processed binaural signal such that the listener perceives an accurate simulated auditory experience. According to another feature of the invention, there is an enclosure providing partial acoustic isolation of the listener from the surrounding environment so as to reduce the distracting effects of background noise. A further feature includes construction so as to reduce the sound level of the simulated demonstration in the area surrounding the apparatus so as not to disturb others outside the apparatus.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is a visual display synchronized with the auditory demonstration that may provide additional information and furnish a pictorial representation of the simulated environment. Preferably, the electroacoustical transducers are concealed so as to further enhance the illusion that the listener is perceiving sound from loudspeakers in an environment not physically present.
Other features, objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description when read in connection with the accompanying drawing in which:
With reference now to the drawings and more particularly
A floor marker 16 may indicate a listening position. A vertically adjustable mounting 17 for electroacoustical transducers 13 and 14 comprises a vertical position adjuster operable by a listener. A visual identifier 18 visually indicates to the listener when the electroacoustical transducers are at a predetermined vertical location with respect to the listener's head.
Alternatively, a listener head location sensor 19 may provide a signal to vertical position adjuster 17 for automatically adjusting the vertical position of the transducers to a predetermined vertical position in response to a signal from logical circuitry 20 responsive to the listener head location signal for actuating the vertically adjustable mounting to position the electroacoustical transducers at a predetermined vertical position related to the listener head position.
In another embodiment of the invention, there are more than two speakers to cover the audio range or to cover the upper frequency audio range, with each speaker typically driven by its own amplifier and each amplifier typically being supplied with a separate signal source. A technique describing how to process two audio input channels, such as the two channels included in a commercially available stereo recording, into the multiplicity of audio signals, one for each of the more than two loudspeakers, for producing the full three-dimensional auditory illusion is described in “Generalized Transaural Stereo and Applications” by Jerry Bauck and Duane S. Cooper identified above. It is an advantage of such a technique to provide improved control over the auditory illusion over an extended listening area, possibly allowing more than one person to use the invention at a time.
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A computer 61, such as a Macintosh 840AV, typically furnishes the audio signals on source lines 21 and the RGB video signal to monitor 62, typically an NEC 21″ diagonal RGB monitor with touch screen fitted to bezel and Apple ADB interface to provide Apple ADB cursor positioning data to computer 61. There is an interior light 63 and door switch 64 that exchange signals with computer 61 through light and door switch interface 65. Computer 61 is also coupled to printer 66 to allow printout of desired information.
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It is also within the scope of this invention to provide other means for locating the listener's head so that the listener experiences the full three-dimensional auditory illusion. An example of such a head-locating means is embodied in the Bose Auditioner Audio Demonstrator incorporated herein by reference comprising, for example, a chin rest on a base unit that supports left and right loudspeakers.
Another approach for locating the listener's head is to mount speakers 13, 14 and woofer 15 at substantially 5′8″ above the floor and provide a marked area 16 (
It is also within the scope of the invention to provide means for adjusting the vertical position of speakers 13 and 14 so as to be aligned on the same horizontal plane as the listener's ears. Such an adjustment may be made by the listener pressing “up” or “down” buttons until a narrowly focused light is visible at eye level; or with an automatic infrared or ultrasonic range-finding sensor of the type used in an auto-focus camera connected to a control and logic circuit that measures the vertical position of the listener's head and ears and adjusts the speaker height accordingly.
Screen 12 is preferably a touch sensitive screen coupled to multimedia software such that at various stages in the presentation, the software controls the display to insert a pause allowing the listener to make a choice, such as the specific equipment being simulated or the specific environment simulated in which the simulated equipment is being demonstrated.
It is also within the scope of the invention to provide means for listener control comprising a joystick, push buttons or touch sensitive pad located within the reach of the listener's hand. It is also within the scope of this invention to provide a microphone for receiving voice commands of the listener, which commands will be received and acted upon by the computer. Such voice control hardware and software functions are incorporated in the Apple Macintosh model 840AV computer.
The walls of booth 41 are typically made of flexible plywood ¼″ thick on a wood stud frame and are typically over 3″ thick with the interior space lined with sound-absorbing wedge-shaped foam, such as Sonex made by Illbruck. The walls are further perforated in many places to allow sound to penetrate. The booth is constructed and arranged to pass the sound from each transducer directly into the space within booth 41 and to absorb any of that sound that impinges on any of the interior surfaces of booth 41 so that the surface avoids reflecting sound to the listener. The interior walls of booth 41 are typically lined with speaker grille cloth material, which is acoustically transparent. The top of the booth equipment bay may include a fan for cooling.
The binaurally encoded signals processed for loudspeaker playback may be recorded or synthesized, stored on, for example, a DAT recorder, CD, or on a computer disk. In the exemplary embodiment, a computer disk stores the binaurally encoded signals processed for loudspeaker reproduction and releases them for reproduction under the control of a multimedia authoring software program in the computer that furnishes both audio and video signals and accepts control instructions from the listener activating the touch sensitive screen. A suitable computer is an Apple Macintosh model 840AV with 32 Mb of RAM, 2 Mb video RAM and a 1.7 gigabytes hard disk having built-in digital to analog converters for the left and right binaurally encoded signals. The computer is connected to the monitor touch screen, a switch in the door and a light control interface. The door switch is typically a magnetically normally open single-pole switch single-pole mounted in the door jamb so that when the door is closed, the switch circuit is closed to furnish a signal when the listener enters or exits.
The software controls recovering binaurally encoded audio signals which have been processed for loudspeaker reproduction and video signals representative of graphic images from the storage disk and sends them in synchronism to the amplifiers and to the display monitor. The software also controls computer operation in response to signals from activation of the touch screen control by the listener and selects the audio signals and video signals for reproduction in response to listener selection so as to demonstrate audio equipment, such as speakers, not physically present in an environment that is not physically present.
The software typically includes an idle loop that waits for a listener to enter and close the door and then causes generation of instructions to the listener to be seated, lean back and adjust the cushion behind the listener's neck. The apparatus then furnishes a description of the purpose and function of the demonstration, plays binaurally encoded signals processed for loudspeaker reproduction and displays graphic images to show the listener that the system performs the functions of simulating audio equipment not physically present in an environment that is not physically present. The apparatus then directs the listener to make selections from several screen images to match the characteristics of a desired listening space in which to hear the desired audio equipment. The apparatus then allows the listener to select specific equipment, such as a specific loudspeaker system. The apparatus then allows the listener to select source material, typically music, and causes reproduction of the selected source material through the selected simulated speakers in the selected simulated space. The listener may then make additional choices and comparisons. The apparatus may also include a printer that prints a summary of the experience, the date, the location and the simulated audio equipment or loudspeaker demonstrated. A suitable printer is a Costar model Address Writer printer connected to the computer serial port. The computer is responsive to the door switch state for starting and stopping the presentation and may tabulate listener responses and timing information for market research purposes, and may automatically send such information back to a central location through a wired or wireless communication link.
The booth includes an interior light, typically a fluorescent tube covered with a colored gel that is on when the software establishes an idling state and turns off when a demonstration sequence starts, typically initiated by the listener touching a specific area on the touch screen.
The specific technique for implementing the software is known to those skilled in the art.
There has been described novel apparatus and techniques for simulating audio equipment not physically present as it would sound in an environment not physically present.
Other embodiments are within the claims.
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4107461 | Bose | Aug 1978 | A |
4227047 | Horne | Oct 1980 | A |
4893342 | Cooper et al. | Jan 1990 | A |
4905284 | Kwang | Feb 1990 | A |
4953223 | Householder | Aug 1990 | A |
4975974 | Nishijima et al. | Dec 1990 | A |
5086755 | Schmid-Eilber | Feb 1992 | A |