2,727 research outputs found
Modern Methods of Time-Frequency Warping of Sound Signals
Tato práce se zabĂ˝vá reprezentacĂ nestacionárnĂch harmonickĂ˝ch signálĹŻ s ÄŤasovÄ› promÄ›nnĂ˝mi komponentami. PrimárnÄ› je zaměřena na Harmonickou transformaci a jeji variantu se subkvadratickou vĂ˝poÄŤetnĂ sloĹľitostĂ, Rychlou harmonickou transformaci. V tĂ©to práci jsou prezentovány dva algoritmy vyuĹľĂvajĂcĂ Rychlou harmonickou transformaci. Prvni pouĹľĂvá jako metodu odhadu zmÄ›ny základnĂho kmitoÄŤtu sbĂranĂ© logaritmickĂ© spektrum a druhá pouĹľĂvá metodu analĂ˝zy syntĂ©zou. Oba algoritmy jsou pouĹľity k analĂ˝ze Ĺ™eÄŤovĂ©ho segmentu pro porovnánĂ vystupĹŻ. Nakonec je algoritmus vyuĹľĂvajĂcĂ metody analĂ˝zy syntĂ©zou pouĹľit na reálnĂ© zvukovĂ© signály, aby bylo moĹľnĂ© změřit zlepšenĂ reprezentace kmitoÄŤtovÄ› modulovanĂ˝ch signálĹŻ za pouĹľitĂ HarmonickĂ© transformace.This thesis deals with representation of non-stationary harmonic signals with time-varying components. Its main focus is aimed at Harmonic Transform and its variant with subquadratic computational complexity, the Fast Harmonic Transform. Two algorithms using the Fast Harmonic Transform are presented. The first uses the gathered log-spectrum as fundamental frequency change estimation method, the second uses analysis-by-synthesis approach. Both algorithms are used on a speech segment to compare its output. Further the analysis-by-synthesis algorithm is applied on several real sound signals to measure the increase in the ability to represent real frequency-modulated signals using the Harmonic Transform.
Nonlinear time-warping made simple: a step-by-step tutorial on underwater acoustic modal separation with a single hydrophone
© The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Bonnel, J., Thode, A., Wright, D., & Chapman, R. Nonlinear time-warping made simple: a step-by-step tutorial on underwater acoustic modal separation with a single hydrophone. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 147(3), (2020): 1897, doi:10.1121/10.0000937.Classical ocean acoustic experiments involve the use of synchronized arrays of sensors. However, the need to cover large areas and/or the use of small robotic platforms has evoked interest in single-hydrophone processing methods for localizing a source or characterizing the propagation environment. One such processing method is “warping,” a non-linear, physics-based signal processing tool dedicated to decomposing multipath features of low-frequency transient signals (frequency f  1 km). Since its introduction to the underwater acoustics community in 2010, warping has been adopted in the ocean acoustics literature, mostly as a pre-processing method for single receiver geoacoustic inversion. Warping also has potential applications in other specialties, including bioacoustics; however, the technique can be daunting to many potential users unfamiliar with its intricacies. Consequently, this tutorial article covers basic warping theory, presents simulation examples, and provides practical experimental strategies. Accompanying supplementary material provides matlab code and simulated and experimental datasets for easy implementation of warping on both impulsive and frequency-modulated signals from both biotic and man-made sources. This combined material should provide interested readers with user-friendly resources for implementing warping methods into their own research.This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research (Task Force Ocean, project N00014-19-1-2627) and by the North Pacific Research Board (project 1810). Original warping developments were supported by the French Delegation Generale de l'Armement
Analysis and application of digital spectral warping in analog and mixed-signal testing
Spectral warping is a digital signal processing transform which shifts the frequencies contained within a signal along the frequency axis. The Fourier transform coefficients of a warped signal correspond to frequency-domain 'samples' of the original signal which are unevenly spaced along the frequency axis. This property allows the technique to be efficiently used for DSP-based analog and mixed-signal testing. The analysis and application of spectral warping for test signal generation, response analysis, filter design, frequency response evaluation, etc. are discussed in this paper along with examples of the software and hardware implementation
The Application of Blind Source Separation to Feature Decorrelation and Normalizations
We apply a Blind Source Separation BSS algorithm to the decorrelation of Mel-warped cepstra. The observed cepstra are modeled as a convolutive mixture of independent source cepstra. The algorithm aims to minimize a cross-spectral correlation at different lags to reconstruct the source cepstra. Results show that using "independent" cepstra as features leads to a reduction in the WER.Finally, we present three different enhancements to the BSS algorithm. We also present some results of these deviations of the original algorithm
- …