16,660 research outputs found
The modeling of diffuse boundaries in the 2-D digital waveguide mesh
The digital waveguide mesh can be used to simulate the propagation of sound waves in an acoustic system. The accurate simulation of the acoustic characteristics of boundaries within such a system is an important part of the model. One significant property of an acoustic boundary is its diffusivity. Previous approaches to simulating diffuse boundaries in a digital waveguide mesh are effective but exhibit limitations and have not been analyzed in detail. An improved technique is presented here that simulates diffusion at boundaries and offers a high degree of control and consistency. This technique works by rotating wavefronts as they pass through a special diffusing layer adjacent to the boundary. The waves are rotated randomly according to a chosen probability function and the model is lossless. This diffusion model is analyzed in detail, and its diffusivity is quantified in the form of frequency dependent diffusion coefficients. The approach used to measuring boundary diffusion is described here in detail for the 2-D digital waveguide mesh and can readily be extended for the 3-D case
A Phase Vocoder based on Nonstationary Gabor Frames
We propose a new algorithm for time stretching music signals based on the
theory of nonstationary Gabor frames (NSGFs). The algorithm extends the
techniques of the classical phase vocoder (PV) by incorporating adaptive
time-frequency (TF) representations and adaptive phase locking. The adaptive TF
representations imply good time resolution for the onsets of attack transients
and good frequency resolution for the sinusoidal components. We estimate the
phase values only at peak channels and the remaining phases are then locked to
the values of the peaks in an adaptive manner. During attack transients we keep
the stretch factor equal to one and we propose a new strategy for determining
which channels are relevant for reinitializing the corresponding phase values.
In contrast to previously published algorithms we use a non-uniform NSGF to
obtain a low redundancy of the corresponding TF representation. We show that
with just three times as many TF coefficients as signal samples, artifacts such
as phasiness and transient smearing can be greatly reduced compared to the
classical PV. The proposed algorithm is tested on both synthetic and real world
signals and compared with state of the art algorithms in a reproducible manner.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Efficient Bayesian inference for harmonic models via adaptive posterior factorization
NOTICE: this is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Neurocomputing. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in NEUROCOMPUTING, [VOL72, ISSUE 1-3, (2008)] DOI10.1016/j.neucom.2007.12.05
- …