The present invention relates to a speech coding system with a speech encoder and a speech decoder cooperating with said speech encoder, the speech encoder comprising a pre-processor and an ADPCM (adaptive differential pulse code modulation) encoder with a quantizer and step-size adaptation means and the speech decoder comprising an ADPCM decoder with similar step-size adaptation means as in the ADPCM encoder and with a decoder, and a post-processor, the quantizer being provided with storage means containing values for a correction factor α((c(n)) of the step-size Δ(n), said correction factor being dependent on the quantizer output signal c(n).
The speech encoder generates a bit-stream, which can be stored or transmitted through a channel. A poor storage device or a bad transmission channel might not be able to preserve this information; bit-errors in the form of bit changes may occur. Also, when voice signals are processed in the encoder of a standard P2CM audio coding system, i.e. a processed ADPCM encoder and -decoder, such bit-errors may occur. When the bit-error rate is higher than 1%, artifacts can be heard. Most of these artifacts are labeled as a sudden increase or decrease in volume. A close examination of the coder reveals that the most vulnery part of the coding system for bit-errors are the adaptive step-size Δ(n) means. The adaptation depends on the generated code levels. When these code levels change due to bit-errors, the step-size of the ADPCM encoder and the ADPCM decoder are no more the same. Therefore, it is already proposed to provide the quantizer with storage means containing values for a correction factor αt(c(n)) of the step-size Δ(n). The step-size may then adapted according to, for example, the relation:
with A a constant (A<1). The down scaled step-size [Δ(n)+b].A is scaled up by a factor α((c(n)) (>1) if the maximum allowed step-size Δmax is not exceeded. The choice of the correction factor value α(c(n)) is such that a faster adaptation for codes belonging to higher quantization levels is made to allow the coding system to adapt faster when the level of the input signal suddenly increases. However, in case small energy changes at the input of the quantizer occur, the adaptation with the known correction tables for the correction factor α((c(n)) is not sufficient.
The purpose of the invention is to provide for an improved step-size adaptation in the quantizer of a speech encoder and decoder.
Therefore, in accordance with the invention, the speech coding system as described in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the step-size adaptation occurs according to the relation:
wherein b, A and Δmax are constants.
Particularly when the pre-processor is provided with phase-smearing filter means and the post-processor is provided with filter means inverse thereto as described in ID604963, the energy of the input to the ADPCM encoder increases more gradually, allowing a better choice for (α(c(n)). Therefore, the content of said patent application is considered to be part of the description of the present invention. Without such phase-smearing filter means problems may arise with pulse-like input signals occurring in close-microphone recording.
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the drawing and the embodiment described hereinafter. In the drawing:
The P2CM audio coding system in
The input for the ADPCM encoder 4 is a sampled audio signal provided by the pre-processor 3. When a sample n has a value s(n), for every input value s(n) the difference between this value and the estimated (predicted) value s(n−1) is taken as an error signal e(n) which is then quantized and encoded by the quantizer block 7, giving the output code c(n). The output code c(n) forms a bitstream which is sent or transmitted and received by the ADPCM decoder 5. In
A further input signal for the ADPCM encoder 4 is formed by a codec mode signal, which is sent or transmitted with the code words to the ADPCM decoder 5. This codec mode signal determines the bit allocation for the code words in the bitstream output of the ADPCM encoder 4 and the ADPCM decoder 5. Depending on the chosen codec mode, the resulting bitstream has a bit-rate of e.g. 12.8, 16, 19.2, 21.6, 24 or 32 kbits/s.
In the quantizer the following computations are made:
First a quantization is done in accordance with the relation:
q(n)=└e(n)/Δ(n)+0.5.cmax+0.5┘,
where └. . . ┘ represents a truncation operation.
The quantized signal q(n) is limited between 0 and cmax, this means that: c(n)=max[0, min{cmax, q(n)}]. The value of cmax is dependent on the codec mode and thus on the bit-rate. For example, with the above bit-rates, cmax may be successively 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 and 15. Then, the new step-size is computed in accordance with the relation:
wherein, in a particular embodiment, b, A and Δmax are set to respectively 16, 0.996 and 8192. Furthermore the quantizer block is provided with storage means, which contains tables for α(c(n)) in dependency on c(n). Particularly in an embodiment where phase-smearing is applied these correction factors allow a more gradual adaptation of the step-size Δ(n) for all codes, resulting in an improved bit-error tolerance. Especially the high bit-rate modes benefit from this. The bit-error tolerance can be controlled by the parameter A; a value of 0.75 appeared to be a good compromise between robustness for bit-errors and overall speech quality, when the bit-error rate becomes higher than 1%.
In the prior art step-size adaptation according to formula (P) mentioned in the introductory part of the description, the values of α(c(n)) are given in the tables of
In the step-size adaptation according to formula, the values of α(c(n)) are given in the tables of
The embodiment described above is realized by an algorithm which may be in the form of a computer program capable of running on signal processing means in a P2CM audio encoder and decoder. In so far parts of the figures show units to perform certain programmable functions, these units must be considered as subparts of the computer program.
The invention described is not restricted to the described embodiments. Modifications thereon are possible. Particularly it may be noticed that the values and tables mentioned in the described embodiments and shown in the figures are only given as an example; other values and tables are possible.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01201300 | Apr 2001 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4285045 | Tamori et al. | Aug 1981 | A |
4476539 | Tamori et al. | Oct 1984 | A |
4856026 | Bergmans et al. | Aug 1989 | A |
5231484 | Gonzales et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
5511095 | Inoue et al. | Apr 1996 | A |
5754974 | Griffin et al. | May 1998 | A |
5978762 | Smyth et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6487535 | Smyth et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
20020007273 | Chen | Jan 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20020184005 A1 | Dec 2002 | US |