Title :
Speech coding for wireless communication
Author :
Mermelstein, Paul
Author_Institution :
INRS Telecommun., Ile des Soeurs, Que., Canada
fDate :
31 Oct-2 Nov 1994
Abstract :
Personal communication systems will be judged primarily on the quality of speech communication they provide. The voice-call capacity depends directly on the bit-rate required to achieve the quality objectives of the specific service. To provide speech quality on wireless systems that is comparable to that attained on today´s wireline systems, at least 16 kb/s are required. New algorithms are being considered for a standard to transmit speech at 8 kb/s in the presence of modest transmission errors. Mobile systems with slightly lower quality requirements in service today employ 8 kb/s (IS-54 and IS-95) and 13 kb/s (GSM), respectively. Efforts are under way to halve these values and thereby double the capacity. The paper reviews current research into achieving higher speech quality at lower bit rates under a variety of environmental and transmission conditions. It provides a short-range perspective on where significant progress is expected in the short-term
Keywords :
cellular radio; linear predictive coding; personal communication networks; speech coding; 13 kbit/s; 16 kbit/s; 8 kbit/s; CELP; cellular radio; linear predictive coding; low bit rate; microcellular radio; personal communication systems; speech coding; speech quality; voice-call capacity; wireless communication; Bandwidth; Bit rate; Costs; Error analysis; Frequency; Oral communication; Speech coding; Telecommunication standards; Telephony; Wireless communication;
Conference_Titel :
Signals, Systems and Computers, 1994. 1994 Conference Record of the Twenty-Eighth Asilomar Conference on
Conference_Location :
Pacific Grove, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-6405-3
DOI :
10.1109/ACSSC.1994.471637