9 research outputs found

    A technique for improved stability of adaptive feedforward controllers without detailed uncertainty measurements

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    Model errors in adaptive controllers for reduction of broadband noise and vibrations may lead to unstable systems or increased error signals. Previous work has shown that the addition of a low-authority controller that increases damping in the system may lead to improved performance of an adaptive, high-authority controller. Other researchers have suggested to use frequency dependent regularization based on measured uncertainties. In this paper an alternative method is presented that avoids the disadvantages of these methods namely the additional complex hardware, and the need to obtain detailed information of the uncertainties. An analysis is made of an active noise control system in which a difference exists between the secondary path and the model as used in the controller. The real parts of the eigenvalues that determine the stability of the system are expressed in terms of the amount of uncertainty and the singular values of the secondary path. Based on these expressions, modifications of the feedforward control scheme are suggested that aim to improved performance without requiring detailed uncertainty measurements. For an active noise control system in a room it is shown that the technique leads to improved performance in terms of robustness and the amount of reduction of the error signals

    Combined MIMO adaptive and decentralized controllers for broadband active noise and vibration control

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    Recent implementations of multiple-input multiple-output adaptive controllers for reduction of broadband noise and vibrations provide considerably improved performance over traditional adaptive algorithms. The most significant performance improvements are in terms of speed of convergence, the \ud amount of reduction, and stability of the algorithm. Nevertheless, if the error in the model of the relevant transfer functions becomes too large then the system may become unstable or lose performance. On-line adaptation of the model is possible in principle but, for rapid changes in the model, necessitates \ud a large amount of additional noise to be injected in the system. It has been known for decades that a combination of high-authority control (HAC) and low-authority control (LAC) could lead to improvements with respect to parametric uncertainties and unmodeled dynamics. In this paper a full digital implementation of such a control system is presented in which the HAC (adaptive MIMO control) is implemented on a CPU and in which the LAC (decentralized control) is implemented on a high-speed Field Programmable Gate Array. Experimental results are given in which it is demonstrated that the HAC/LAC combination leads to performance advantages in terms of stabilization under parametric uncertainties and reduction of the error signal

    Fetal ECG Extraction from Maternal ECG using Attention-based CycleGAN

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    Non-invasive fetal electrocardiogram (FECG) is used to monitor the electrical pulse of the fetal heart. Decomposing the FECG signal from maternal ECG (MECG) is a blind source separation problem, which is hard due to the low amplitude of FECG, the overlap of R waves, and the potential exposure to noise from different sources. Traditional decomposition techniques, such as adaptive filters, require tuning, alignment, or pre-configuration, such as modeling the noise or desired signal. to map MECG to FECG efficiently. The high correlation between maternal and fetal ECG parts decreases the performance of convolution layers. Therefore, the masking region of interest using the attention mechanism is performed for improving signal generators' precision. The sine activation function is also used since it could retain more details when converting two signal domains. Three available datasets from the Physionet, including A&D FECG, NI-FECG, and NI-FECG challenge, and one synthetic dataset using FECGSYN toolbox, are used to evaluate the performance. The proposed method could map abdominal MECG to scalp FECG with an average 98% R-Square [CI 95%: 97%, 99%] as the goodness of fit on A&D FECG dataset. Moreover, it achieved 99.7 % F1-score [CI 95%: 97.8-99.9], 99.6% F1-score [CI 95%: 98.2%, 99.9%] and 99.3% F1-score [CI 95%: 95.3%, 99.9%] for fetal QRS detection on, A&D FECG, NI-FECG and NI-FECG challenge datasets, respectively. These results are comparable to the state-of-the-art; thus, the proposed algorithm has the potential of being used for high-performance signal-to-signal conversion

    A Novel Deep Learning Technique for Morphology Preserved Fetal ECG Extraction from Mother ECG using 1D-CycleGAN

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    Monitoring the electrical pulse of fetal heart through a non-invasive fetal electrocardiogram (fECG) can easily detect abnormalities in the developing heart to significantly reduce the infant mortality rate and post-natal complications. Due to the overlapping of maternal and fetal R-peaks, the low amplitude of the fECG, systematic and ambient noises, typical signal extraction methods, such as adaptive filters, independent component analysis, empirical mode decomposition, etc., are unable to produce satisfactory fECG. While some techniques can produce accurate QRS waves, they often ignore other important aspects of the ECG. Our approach, which is based on 1D CycleGAN, can reconstruct the fECG signal from the mECG signal while maintaining the morphology due to extensive preprocessing and appropriate framework. The performance of our solution was evaluated by combining two available datasets from Physionet, "Abdominal and Direct Fetal ECG Database" and "Fetal electrocardiograms, direct and abdominal with reference heartbeat annotations", where it achieved an average PCC and Spectral-Correlation score of 88.4% and 89.4%, respectively. It detects the fQRS of the signal with accuracy, precision, recall and F1 score of 92.6%, 97.6%, 94.8% and 96.4%, respectively. It can also accurately produce the estimation of fetal heart rate and R-R interval with an error of 0.25% and 0.27%, respectively. The main contribution of our work is that, unlike similar studies, it can retain the morphology of the ECG signal with high fidelity. The accuracy of our solution for fetal heart rate and R-R interval length is comparable to existing state-of-the-art techniques. This makes it a highly effective tool for early diagnosis of fetal heart diseases and regular health checkups of the fetus.Comment: 24 pages, 11 figure

    An investigation of delayless subband adaptive filtering for multi-input multi-output active noise control applications

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    The broadband control of noise and vibration using multi-input, multi-output (MIMO) active control systems has a potentially wide variety of applications. However, the performance of MIMO systems is often limited in practice by high computational demand and slow convergence speeds. In the somewhat simpler context of single-input, single- output broadband control, these problems have been overcome through a variety of methods including subband adaptive filtering. This paper presents an extension of the subband adaptive filtering technique to the MIMO active control problem and presents a comprehensive study of both the computational requirements and control performance. The implementation of the MIMO filtered-x LMS algorithm using subband adaptive filtering is described and the details of two specific implementations are presented. The computational demands of the two MIMO subband active control algorithms are then compared to that of the standard full-band algorithm. This comparison shows that as the number of subbands employed in the subband algorithms is increased, the computational demand is significantly reduced compared to the full-band implementation provided that a restructured analysis filter-bank is employed. An analysis of the convergence of the MIMO subband adaptive algorithm is then presented and this demonstrates that although the convergence of the control filter coefficients is dependent on the eigenvalue spread of the subband Hessian matrix, which reduces as the number of subbands is increased, the convergence of the cost function is limited for large numbers of subbands due to the simultaneous increase in the weight stacking distortion. The performance of the two MIMO subband algorithms and the standard full-band algorithm has then been assessed through a series of time-domain simulations of a practical active control system and it has been shown that the subband algorithms are able to achieve a significant increase in the convergence speed compared to the full-band implementatio

    Control Effort Strategies for Acoustically Coupled Distributed Acoustic Nodes

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    [EN] This paper considers the effect of effort constraints on the behavior of an active noise control (ANC) system over a distributed network composed of acoustic nodes. A distributed implementation can be desirable in order to provide more flexible, versatile, and scalable ANC systems. In this regard, the distributed version of the multiple error filtered-x least mean square (DMEFxLMS) algorithm that allows collaboration between nodes has shown excellent properties. However, practical constraints need to be considered since, in real scenarios, the acoustic nodes are equipped with power constrained actuators. If these constraints are not considered within the adaptive algorithm, the control signals may increase and saturate the hardware devices, causing system instability. To avoid this drawback, a control effort weighting can be considered in the cost function of the distributed algorithm at each node. Therefore, a control effort strategy over the output signals at each node is used to keep them under a given threshold and ensuring the distributed ANC system stability. Experimental results show that, assuming ideal network communications, the proposed distributed algorithm achieves the same performance as the leaky centralized ANC system. A performance evaluation of several versions of the leaky DMEFxLMS algorithm in realistic scenarios is also included.This work has been supported by European Union ERDF together with Spanish Government through TEC2015-67387-C4-1-R project and Generalitat Valenciana through PROMETEOII/2014/003 project.Antoñanzas-Manuel, C.; Ferrer Contreras, M.; Diego Antón, MD.; Gonzalez, A. (2017). Control Effort Strategies for Acoustically Coupled Distributed Acoustic Nodes. Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing. 2017:1-15. https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/3601802S1152017Akyildiz, I. F., Weilian Su, Sankarasubramaniam, Y., & Cayirci, E. (2002). 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J., Cobos, M., & Navarro, J. M. (2015). Low-Cost Alternatives for Urban Noise Nuisance Monitoring Using Wireless Sensor Networks. IEEE Sensors Journal, 15(2), 836-844. doi:10.1109/jsen.2014.2356342Flammini, A., Ferrari, P., Marioli, D., Sisinni, E., & Taroni, A. (2009). Wired and wireless sensor networks for industrial applications. Microelectronics Journal, 40(9), 1322-1336. doi:10.1016/j.mejo.2008.08.012Lopes, C. G., & Sayed, A. H. (2007). Incremental Adaptive Strategies Over Distributed Networks. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 55(8), 4064-4077. doi:10.1109/tsp.2007.896034Cobos, M., Perez-Solano, J. J., Belmonte, O., Ramos, G., & Torres, A. M. (2016). Simultaneous Ranging and Self-Positioning in Unsynchronized Wireless Acoustic Sensor Networks. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 64(22), 5993-6004. doi:10.1109/tsp.2016.2603972Llerena-Aguilar, C., Gil-Pita, R., Rosa-Zurera, M., Ayllón, D., Utrilla-Manso, M., & Llerena, F. (2016). Synchronization based on mixture alignment for sound source separation in wireless acoustic sensor networks. Signal Processing, 118, 177-187. doi:10.1016/j.sigpro.2015.06.023Elliott, S. J., & Nelson, P. A. (1993). Active noise control. IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, 10(4), 12-35. doi:10.1109/79.248551Elliott, S. J., Joseph, P., Bullmore, A. J., & Nelson, P. A. (1988). Active cancellation at a point in a pure tone diffuse sound field. Journal of Sound and Vibration, 120(1), 183-189. doi:10.1016/0022-460x(88)90343-4Joseph, P., Elliott, S. J., & Nelson, P. A. (1994). Near Field Zones of Quiet. Journal of Sound and Vibration, 172(5), 605-627. doi:10.1006/jsvi.1994.1202Kuo, S. M., & Morgan, D. R. (1999). Active noise control: a tutorial review. Proceedings of the IEEE, 87(6), 943-975. doi:10.1109/5.763310Burgess, J. C. (1981). Active adaptive sound control in a duct: A computer simulation. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 70(3), 715-726. doi:10.1121/1.386908Elliott, S. J., & Boucher, C. C. (1994). Interaction between multiple feedforward active control systems. IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing, 2(4), 521-530. doi:10.1109/89.326611Grosdidier, P., & Morari, M. (1986). Interaction measures for systems under decentralized control. Automatica, 22(3), 309-319. doi:10.1016/0005-1098(86)90029-4Elliott, S., Stothers, I., & Nelson, P. (1987). A multiple error LMS algorithm and its application to the active control of sound and vibration. IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 35(10), 1423-1434. doi:10.1109/tassp.1987.1165044Elliott, S. J., & Back, K. H. (1996). Effort constraints in adaptive feedforward control. IEEE Signal Processing Letters, 3(1), 7-9. doi:10.1109/97.475821Qiu, X., & Hansen, C. H. (2001). A study of time-domain FXLMS algorithms with control output constraint. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 109(6), 2815-2823. doi:10.1121/1.1367247Rafaely, B., & Elliot, S. J. (2000). A computationally efficient frequency-domain LMS algorithm with constraints on the adaptive filter. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing, 48(6), 1649-1655. doi:10.1109/78.845922Kozacky, W. J., & Ogunfunmi, T. (2013). An active noise control algorithm with gain and power constraints on the adaptive filter. EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, 2013(1). doi:10.1186/1687-6180-2013-17Mosquera-Sánchez, J. A., Desmet, W., & de Oliveira, L. P. R. (2017). A multichannel amplitude and relative-phase controller for active sound quality control. Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing, 88, 145-165. doi:10.1016/j.ymssp.2016.10.036Rossetti, D. J., Jolly, M. R., & Southward, S. C. (1996). Control effort weighting in feedforward adaptive control systems. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 99(5), 2955-2964. doi:10.1121/1.414877Antoñanzas, C., Ferrer, M., de Diego, M., & Gonzalez, A. (2016). Blockwise Frequency Domain Active Noise Controller Over Distributed Networks. 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    Improving Maternal and Fetal Cardiac Monitoring Using Artificial Intelligence

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    Early diagnosis of possible risks in the physiological status of fetus and mother during pregnancy and delivery is critical and can reduce mortality and morbidity. For example, early detection of life-threatening congenital heart disease may increase survival rate and reduce morbidity while allowing parents to make informed decisions. To study cardiac function, a variety of signals are required to be collected. In practice, several heart monitoring methods, such as electrocardiogram (ECG) and photoplethysmography (PPG), are commonly performed. Although there are several methods for monitoring fetal and maternal health, research is currently underway to enhance the mobility, accuracy, automation, and noise resistance of these methods to be used extensively, even at home. Artificial Intelligence (AI) can help to design a precise and convenient monitoring system. To achieve the goals, the following objectives are defined in this research: The first step for a signal acquisition system is to obtain high-quality signals. As the first objective, a signal processing scheme is explored to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of signals and extract the desired signal from a noisy one with negative SNR (i.e., power of noise is greater than signal). It is worth mentioning that ECG and PPG signals are sensitive to noise from a variety of sources, increasing the risk of misunderstanding and interfering with the diagnostic process. The noises typically arise from power line interference, white noise, electrode contact noise, muscle contraction, baseline wandering, instrument noise, motion artifacts, electrosurgical noise. Even a slight variation in the obtained ECG waveform can impair the understanding of the patient's heart condition and affect the treatment procedure. Recent solutions, such as adaptive and blind source separation (BSS) algorithms, still have drawbacks, such as the need for noise or desired signal model, tuning and calibration, and inefficiency when dealing with excessively noisy signals. Therefore, the final goal of this step is to develop a robust algorithm that can estimate noise, even when SNR is negative, using the BSS method and remove it based on an adaptive filter. The second objective is defined for monitoring maternal and fetal ECG. Previous methods that were non-invasive used maternal abdominal ECG (MECG) for extracting fetal ECG (FECG). These methods need to be calibrated to generalize well. In other words, for each new subject, a calibration with a trustable device is required, which makes it difficult and time-consuming. The calibration is also susceptible to errors. We explore deep learning (DL) models for domain mapping, such as Cycle-Consistent Adversarial Networks, to map MECG to fetal ECG (FECG) and vice versa. The advantages of the proposed DL method over state-of-the-art approaches, such as adaptive filters or blind source separation, are that the proposed method is generalized well on unseen subjects. Moreover, it does not need calibration and is not sensitive to the heart rate variability of mother and fetal; it can also handle low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) conditions. Thirdly, AI-based system that can measure continuous systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) with minimum electrode requirements is explored. The most common method of measuring blood pressure is using cuff-based equipment, which cannot monitor blood pressure continuously, requires calibration, and is difficult to use. Other solutions use a synchronized ECG and PPG combination, which is still inconvenient and challenging to synchronize. The proposed method overcomes those issues and only uses PPG signal, comparing to other solutions. Using only PPG for blood pressure is more convenient since it is only one electrode on the finger where its acquisition is more resilient against error due to movement. The fourth objective is to detect anomalies on FECG data. The requirement of thousands of manually annotated samples is a concern for state-of-the-art detection systems, especially for fetal ECG (FECG), where there are few publicly available FECG datasets annotated for each FECG beat. Therefore, we will utilize active learning and transfer-learning concept to train a FECG anomaly detection system with the least training samples and high accuracy. In this part, a model is trained for detecting ECG anomalies in adults. Later this model is trained to detect anomalies on FECG. We only select more influential samples from the training set for training, which leads to training with the least effort. Because of physician shortages and rural geography, pregnant women's ability to get prenatal care might be improved through remote monitoring, especially when access to prenatal care is limited. Increased compliance with prenatal treatment and linked care amongst various providers are two possible benefits of remote monitoring. If recorded signals are transmitted correctly, maternal and fetal remote monitoring can be effective. Therefore, the last objective is to design a compression algorithm that can compress signals (like ECG) with a higher ratio than state-of-the-art and perform decompression fast without distortion. The proposed compression is fast thanks to the time domain B-Spline approach, and compressed data can be used for visualization and monitoring without decompression owing to the B-spline properties. Moreover, the stochastic optimization is designed to retain the signal quality and does not distort signal for diagnosis purposes while having a high compression ratio. In summary, components for creating an end-to-end system for day-to-day maternal and fetal cardiac monitoring can be envisioned as a mix of all tasks listed above. PPG and ECG recorded from the mother can be denoised using deconvolution strategy. Then, compression can be employed for transmitting signal. The trained CycleGAN model can be used for extracting FECG from MECG. Then, trained model using active transfer learning can detect anomaly on both MECG and FECG. Simultaneously, maternal BP is retrieved from the PPG signal. This information can be used for monitoring the cardiac status of mother and fetus, and also can be used for filling reports such as partogram

    Distributed and Collaborative Processing of Audio Signals: Algorithms, Tools and Applications

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    Tesis por compendio[ES] Esta tesis se enmarca en el campo de las Tecnologías de la Información y las Comunicaciones (TIC), especialmente en el área del procesado digital de la señal. En la actualidad, y debido al auge del Internet de los cosas (IoT), existe un creciente interés por las redes de sensores inalámbricos (WSN), es decir, redes compuestas de diferentes tipos de dispositivos específicamente distribuidos en una determinada zona para realizar diferentes tareas de procesado de señal. Estos dispositivos o nodos suelen estar equipados con transductores electroacústicos así como con potentes y eficientes procesadores con capacidad de comunicación. En el caso particular de las redes de sensores acústicos (ASN), los nodos se dedican a resolver diferentes tareas de procesado de señales acústicas. El desarrollo de potentes sistemas de procesado centralizado han permitido aumentar el número de canales de audio, ampliar el área de control o implementar algoritmos más complejos. En la mayoría de los casos, una topología de ASN distribuida puede ser deseable debido a varios factores tales como el número limitado de canales utilizados por los dispositivos de adquisición y reproducción de audio, la conveniencia de un sistema escalable o las altas exigencias computacionales de los sistemas centralizados. Todos estos aspectos pueden llevar a la utilización de nuevas técnicas de procesado distribuido de señales con el fin de aplicarlas en ASNs. Para ello, una de las principales aportaciones de esta tesis es el desarrollo de algoritmos de filtrado adaptativo para sistemas de audio multicanal en redes distribuidas. Es importante tener en cuenta que, para aplicaciones de control del campo sonoro (SFC), como el control activo de ruido (ANC) o la ecualización activa de ruido (ANE), los nodos acústicos deben estar equipados con actuadores con el fin de controlar y modificar el campo sonoro. Sin embargo, la mayoría de las propuestas de redes distribuidas adaptativas utilizadas para resolver problemas de control del campo sonoro no tienen en cuenta que los nodos pueden interferir o modificar el comportamiento del resto. Por lo tanto, otra contribución destacable de esta tesis se centra en el análisis de cómo el sistema acústico afecta el comportamiento de los nodos dentro de una ASN. En los casos en que el entorno acústico afecta negativamente a la estabilidad del sistema, se han propuesto varias estrategias distribuidas para resolver el problema de interferencia acústica con el objetivo de estabilizar los sistemas de ANC. En el diseño de los algoritmos distribuidos también se han tenido en cuenta aspectos de implementación práctica. Además, con el objetivo de crear perfiles de ecualización diferentes en zonas de escucha independientes en presencia de ruidos multitonales, se han presentado varios algoritmos distribuidos de ANE en banda estrecha y banda ancha sobre una ASN con una comunicación colaborativa y compuesta por nodos acústicos. Se presentan además resultados experimentales para validar el uso de los algoritmos distribuidos propuestos en el trabajo para aplicaciones prácticas. Para ello, se ha diseñado un software de simulación acústica que permite analizar el rendimiento de los algoritmos desarrollados en la tesis. Finalmente, se ha realizado una implementación práctica que permite ejecutar aplicaciones multicanal de SFC. Para ello, se ha desarrollado un prototipo en tiempo real que controla las aplicaciones de ANC y ANE utilizando nodos acústicos colaborativos. El prototipo consiste en dos sistemas de control de audio personalizado (PAC) compuestos por un asiento de coche y un nodo acústico, el cual está equipado con dos altavoces, dos micrófonos y un procesador con capacidad de comunicación entre los dos nodos. De esta manera, es posible crear dos zonas independientes de control de ruido que mejoran el confort acústico del usuario sin necesidad de utilizar auriculares.[CA] Aquesta tesi s'emmarca en el camp de les Tecnologies de la Informació i les Comunicacions (TIC), especialment en l'àrea del processament digital del senyal. En l'actualitat, i a causa de l'auge de la Internet dels coses (IoT), existeix un creixent interés per les xarxes de sensors sense fils (WSN), és a dir, xarxes compostes de diferents tipus de dispositius específicament distribuïts en una determinada zona per a fer diferents tasques de processament de senyal. Aquests dispositius o nodes solen estar equipats amb transductors electroacústics així com amb potents i eficients processadors amb capacitat de comunicació. En el cas particular de les xarxes de sensors acústics (ASN), els nodes es dediquen a resoldre diferents tasques de processament de senyals acústics. El desenvolupament de potents sistemes de processament centralitzat han permés augmentar el nombre de canals d'àudio, ampliar l'àrea de control o implementar algorismes més complexos. En la majoria dels casos, una topologia de ASN distribuïda pot ser desitjable a causa de diversos factors tals com el nombre limitat de canals utilitzats pels dispositius d'adquisició i reproducció d'àudio, la conveniència d'un sistema escalable o les altes exigències computacionals dels sistemes centralitzats. Tots aquests aspectes poden portar a la utilització de noves tècniques de processament distribuït de senyals amb la finalitat d'aplicar-les en ASNs. Per a això, una de les principals aportacions d'aquesta tesi és el desenvolupament d'algorismes de filtrat adaptatiu per a sistemes d'àudio multicanal en xarxes distribuïdes. És important tindre en compte que, per a aplicacions de control del camp sonor (SFC), com el control actiu de soroll (ANC) o l'equalització activa de soroll (ANE), els nodes acústics han d'estar equipats amb actuadors amb la finalitat de controlar i modificar el camp sonor. No obstant això, la majoria de les propostes de xarxes distribuïdes adaptatives utilitzades per a resoldre problemes de control del camp sonor no tenen en compte que els nodes poden modificar el comportament de la resta. Per tant, una altra contribució destacable d'aquesta tesi se centra en l'anàlisi de com el sistema acústic afecta el comportament dels nodes dins d'una ASN. En els casos en què l'entorn acústic afecta negativament a l'estabilitat del sistema, s'han proposat diverses estratègies distribuïdes per a resoldre el problema d'interferència acústica amb l'objectiu d'estabilitzar els sistemes de ANC. En el disseny dels algorismes distribuïts també s'han tingut en compte aspectes d'implementació pràctica. A més, amb l'objectiu de crear perfils d'equalització diferents en zones d'escolta independents en presència de sorolls multitonales, s'han presentat diversos algorismes distribuïts de ANE en banda estreta i banda ampla sobre una ASN amb una comunicació col·laborativa i composta per nodes acústics. Es presenten a més resultats experimentals per a validar l'ús dels algorismes distribuïts proposats en el treball per a aplicacions pràctiques. Per a això, s'ha dissenyat un programari de simulació acústica que permet analitzar el rendiment dels algorismes desenvolupats en la tesi. Finalment, s'ha realitzat una implementació pràctica que permet executar aplicacions multicanal de SFC. Per a això, s'ha desenvolupat un prototip en temps real que controla les aplicacions de ANC i ANE utilitzant nodes acústics col·laboratius. El prototip consisteix en dos sistemes de control d'àudio personalitzat (PAC) compostos per un seient de cotxe i un node acústic, el qual està equipat amb dos altaveus, dos micròfons i un processador amb capacitat de comunicació entre els dos nodes. D'aquesta manera, és possible crear dues zones independents de control de soroll que milloren el confort acústic de l'usuari sense necessitat d'utilitzar auriculars.[EN] This thesis fits into the field of Information and Communications Technology (ICT), especially in the area of digital signal processing. Nowadays and due to the rise of the Internet of Things (IoT), there is a growing interest in wireless sensor networks (WSN), that is, networks composed of different types of devices specifically distributed in some area to perform different signal processsing tasks. These devices, also referred to as nodes, are usually equipped with electroacoustic transducers as well as powerful and efficient processors with communication capability. In the particular case of acoustic sensor networks (ASN), nodes are dedicated to solving different acoustic signal processing tasks. These audio signal processing applications have been undergone a major development in recent years due in part to the advances made in computer hardware and software. The development of powerful centralized processing systems has allowed the number of audio channels to be increased, the control area to be extended or more complex algorithmms to be implemented. In most cases, a distributed ASN topology can be desirable due to several factors such as the limited number of channels used by the sound acquisition and reproduction devices, the convenience of a scalable system or the high computational demands of a centralized fashion. All these aspects may lead to the use of novel distributed signal processing techniques with the aim to be applied over ASNs. To this end, one of the main contributions of this dissertation is the development of adaptive filtering algorithms for multichannel sound systems over distributed networks. Note that, for sound field control (SFC) applications, such as active noise control (ANC) or active noise equalization (ANE), acoustic nodes must be not only equipped with sensors but also with actuators in order to control and modify the sound field. However, most of the adaptive distributed networks approaches used to solve soundfield control problems do not take into account that the nodes may interfere or modify the behaviour of the rest. Therefore, other important contribution of this thesis is focused on analyzing how the acoustic system affects the behavior of the nodes within an ASN. In cases where the acoustic environment adversely affects the system stability, several distributed strategies have been proposed for solving the acoustic interference problem with the aim to stabilize ANC control systems. These strategies are based on both collaborative and non-collaborative approaches. Implementation aspects such as hardware constraints, sensor locations, convergenge rate or computational and communication burden, have been also considered on the design of the distributed algorithms. Moreover and with the aim to create independent-zone equalization profiles in the presence of multi-tonal noises, distributed narrowband and broadband ANE algorithms over an ASN with a collaborative learning and composed of acoustic nodes have been presented. Experimental results are presented to validate the use of the distributed algorithms proposed in the work for practical applications. For this purpose, an acoustic simulation software has been specifically designed to analyze the performance of the developed algorithms. Finally, the performance of the proposed distributed algorithms for multichannel SFC applications has been evaluated by means of a real practical implementation. To this end, a real-time prototype that controls both ANC and ANE applications by using collaborative acoustic nodes has been developed. The prototype consists of two personal audio control (PAC) systems composed of a car seat and an acoustic node, which is equipped with two loudspeakers, two microphones and a processor with communications capability. In this way, it is possible to create two independent noise control zones improving the acoustic comfort of the user without the use of headphones.Antoñanzas Manuel, C. (2019). Distributed and Collaborative Processing of Audio Signals: Algorithms, Tools and Applications [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/130209TESISCompendi
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