J Acoust Soc Am
September 2023
This paper proposes a time-domain nearfield beamformer with spherical harmonic decomposition. The beamformer design is separated into two stages: sound field measurement and beamformer coefficient design. This makes it easier for the beamformer to be implemented by different array structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSound field reproduction algorithms require loudspeaker directivity, which is usually measured at discrete frequencies. A time domain model of loudspeaker directivity benefits broadband applications. This Letter proposes the concept of a directional wave front in the time domain, which could be linked to loudspeaker impulse responses measured on a spherical surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe knowledge of frequency-dependent spatiotemporal features of the reflected soundfield is essential in optimizing the perception quality of spatial audio applications. For this purpose, we need a reliable room acoustic analyzer that can conceive the spatial variations in a decaying reflected soundfield according to the frequency-dependent surface properties and source directivity. This paper introduces a time-frequency-dependent angular reflection power distribution model represented by a von Mises-Fisher (vMF) mixture function to facilitate manifold analysis of a reverberant soundfield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpatial active noise control (ANC) systems focus on minimizing unwanted acoustic noise over continuous spatial regions by generating anti-noise fields with secondary loudspeakers. Conventionally, error microphones are necessary inside the region to measure the channels from the secondary loudspeakers to the error microphones and record the residual sound field during the noise control. These error microphones highly limit the implementation of spatial ANC systems because of their impractical geometry and obstruction to the users from accessing the region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActive noise control (ANC) over an extended spatial region using multiple microphones and multiple loudspeakers has become an important problem. The maximum noise reduction (NR) potential over the control area is a critical evaluation variable as it indicates the fundamental limitation of a given ANC system. In this paper, a method to mathematically formulate the NR potential for any given multichannel ANC systems is developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMode-matching based multizone reproduction has been mainly focused on a purely two-dimensional (2D) theory, where infinite-long 2D secondary sources are assumed for 2D multizone reproduction. Its extension to the three-dimensional (3D) case requires more secondary sources and a higher computational complexity. This work investigates a more practical setup to use 3D sound sources as secondary sources for multizone reproduction in a 2D horizontal plane, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBinaural room responses are normally measured on a listening subject in a room. The measurements, however, rapidly change with the source and receiver position. In addition, the measurements taken in a room can only be used to simulate scenes of that environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sound field separation methods can separate the target field from the interfering noises, facilitating the study of the acoustic characteristics of the target source, which is placed in a noisy environment. However, most of the existing sound field separation methods are derived in the frequency-domain, thus they are best suited for separating stationary sound fields. In this paper, a time-domain sound field separation method is developed that can separate the non-stationary sound field generated by the target source over a sphere in real-time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSound intensity is a fundamental quantity describing acoustic wave fields and it contains both energy and directivity information. It is used in a variety of applications such as source localization, reproduction, and power measurement. Until now, intensity is defined at a point in space, however given sound propagates over space, knowing its spatial distribution could be more powerful.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent active noise control systems can cancel noises in a duct effectively. However, they are insufficient for suppressing complex noise fields in time-varying rooms. This paper develops an active noise control system that can cancel tonal noise fields produced by a primary source in a room.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllen and Berkley's image source method (ISM) is proven to be a very useful and popular technique for simulating the acoustic room transfer function (RTF) in reverberant rooms. It is based on the assumption that the source and receiver of interest are both omnidirectional. With the inherent directional nature of practical loudspeakers and the increasing use of directional microphones, the above assumption is often invalid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
November 2017
In this work, analytic expressions for the spatial coherence of noise fields are derived in the modal domain with the aim of providing a sparse representation. For this purpose, the sound field in a region of interest is expressed in terms of a given pressure distribution on a virtual surrounding cylindrical or spherical surface. According to the Huygens-Fresnel principle, the sound pressure on this surface is represented by a continuous distribution of elementary line or point sources, where orthogonal basis functions characterize the spatial properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcoustic reciprocity is a fundamental property of acoustic wavefields that is commonly used to simplify the measurement process of many practical applications. Traditionally, the reciprocity theorem is defined between a monopole point source and a point receiver. Intuitively, it must apply to more complex transducers than monopoles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMulti-channel active noise control (ANC) is currently an attractive solution for the attenuation of low-frequency noise fields, in three-dimensional space. This paper develops a controller for the case when the noise source components are sparsely distributed in space. The anti-noise signals are designed as in conventional ANC to minimize the residual errors but with an additional term containing an ℓ norm regularization applied to the signal magnitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMulti-zone sound control aims to reproduce multiple sound fields independently and simultaneously over different spatial regions within the same space. This paper investigates the multi-zone sound control problem formulated in the modal domain using the Lagrange cost function and provides a modal-domain analysis of the problem. The Lagrange cost function is formulated to represent a quadratic objective of reproducing a desired sound field within the bright zone and with constraints on sound energy in the dark zone and global region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoundfield analysis based on spherical harmonic decomposition has been widely used in various applications; however, a drawback is the three-dimensional geometry of the microphone arrays. In this paper, a method to design two-dimensional planar microphone arrays that are capable of capturing three-dimensional (3D) spatial soundfields is proposed. Through the utilization of both omni-directional and first order microphones, the proposed microphone array is capable of measuring soundfield components that are undetectable to conventional planar omni-directional microphone arrays, thus providing the same functionality as 3D arrays designed for the same purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
September 2015
This letter proposes an efficient parameterization of the three-dimensional room transfer function (RTF) which is robust for the position variations of source and receiver in respective horizontal planes. Based on azimuth harmonic analysis, the proposed method exploits the underlying properties of the associated Legendre functions to remove a portion of the spherical harmonic coefficients of RTF which have no contribution in the horizontal plane. This reduction leads to a flexible measuring-point structure consisting of practical concentric circular arrays to extract horizontal plane RTF coefficients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigher order sound sources of Nth order can radiate sound with 2N + 1 orthogonal radiation patterns, which can be represented as phase modes or, equivalently, amplitude modes. This paper shows that each phase mode response produces a spiral wave front with a different spiral rate, and therefore a different direction of arrival of sound. Hence, for a given receiver position a higher order source is equivalent to a linear array of 2N + 1 monopole sources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spectral localization cues contained in the head-related transfer function are known to play a contributory role in the sound source localization abilities of humans. However, existing localization techniques are unable to fully exploit this diversity to accurately localize a sound source. The availability of just two measured signals complicates matters further, and results in front to back confusions and poor performance distinguishing between the source locations in a vertical plane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2015
Photoacoustic imaging is a biomedical imaging modality capable of early cancer detection. In this paper, we proposed a novel iterative Projections Onto Convex Sets (POCS) method for improving photoacoustic reconstruction. This method aims to obtain a non negative pressure distribution satisfying the measured signals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoacoustic image reconstruction algorithms are usually slow due to the large sizes of data that are processed. This paper proposes a method for exact photoacoustic reconstruction for the spherical geometry in the limiting case of a continuous aperture and infinite measurement bandwidth that is faster than existing methods namely (1) backprojection method and (2) the Norton-Linzer method [S. J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpatial sound reproduction systems aim to produce a desired sound field over a volume of space. At high frequencies, the number of loudspeakers required is prohibitive. This paper shows that the use of loudspeakers with up to Nth order directivity allows reproduction over N times the bandwidth and produces a significantly attenuated exterior sound field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
January 2011
Reproduction of a given sound field interior to a circular loudspeaker array without producing an undesirable exterior sound field is an unsolved problem over a broadband of frequencies. At low frequencies, by implementing the Kirchhoff-Helmholtz integral using a circular discrete array of line-source loudspeakers, a sound field can be recreated within the array and produce no exterior sound field, provided that the loudspeakers have azimuthal polar responses with variable first-order responses which are a combination of a two-dimensional (2D) monopole and a radially oriented 2D dipole. This paper examines the performance of circular discrete arrays of line-source loudspeakers which also include a tangential dipole, providing general variable-directivity responses in azimuth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper develops theory to design higher order directional microphone arrays. The proposed higher order designs have similar inter sensor spacings as traditional first and second order differential arrays. The Jacobi-Anger expansion is used to exploit the underlying structure of microphone signals from pairs of closely spaced sensors.
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