Time Domain Velocity Vector for Retracing the Multipath Propagation

06/03/2020
by   Jérôme Daniel, et al.
0

We propose a conceptually and computationally simple form of sound velocity that offers a readable view of the interference between direct and indirect sound waves. Unlike most approaches in the literature, it jointly exploits both active and reactive sound intensity measurements, as typically derived from a first order ambisonics recording. This representation has a potential both as a valuable tool for directly analyzing sound multipath propagation, as well as being a new spatial feature format for machine learning algorithms in audio and acoustics. As a showcase, we demonstrate that the Direction-Of-Arrival and the range of a sound source can be estimated as a development of this approach. To the best knowledge of the authors, this is the first time that range is estimated from an ambisonics recording.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
03/10/2022

Echo-enabled Direction-of-Arrival and range estimation of a mobile source in Ambisonic domain

Range estimation of a far field sound source in a reverberant environmen...
research
02/13/2018

Close Miking Empirical Practice Verification: A Source Separation Approach

Close miking represents a widely employed practice of placing a micropho...
research
06/29/2021

DCASE 2021 Task 3: Spectrotemporally-aligned Features for Polyphonic Sound Event Localization and Detection

Sound event localization and detection consists of two subtasks which ar...
research
10/10/2019

DOA Estimation by DNN-based Denoising and Dereverberation from Sound Intensity Vector

We propose a direction of arrival (DOA) estimation method that combines ...
research
06/17/2020

ExSampling: a system for the real-time ensemble performance of field-recorded environmental sounds

We propose ExSampling: an integrated system of recording application and...
research
03/16/2021

Graphic relation between amplitude and sound intensity level

We present a simple experiment that allows us to demonstrate graphically...
research
01/29/2018

Local Visual Microphones: Improved Sound Extraction from Silent Video

Sound waves cause small vibrations in nearby objects. A few techniques e...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset