Title :
The weft: a representation for periodic sounds
Author_Institution :
Int. Comput. Sci. Inst., Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract :
For the problem of separating sound mixtures, periodicity is a powerful cue used by both human listeners and automatic systems. Short-term autocorrelation of subband envelopes, as in the correlogram, accounts for much perceptual data. We present a discrete representation of common-period sounds, derived from the correlogram, for use in computational auditory scene analysis: The weft describes a sound in terms of a time-varying periodicity and a smoothed spectral envelope of the energy exhibiting that period. Wefts improve on several aspects of previous approaches by providing, without additional grouping, a single, invertible element for each detected signal, and also a provisional solution to detecting and dissociating energy of different periodicities in a single frequency channel (unlike systems which allocate whole frequency channels to one source). We define the weft, describe the analysis procedure we have devised, and illustrate its capacity to separate periodic sounds from other signals
Keywords :
acoustic correlation; acoustic signal processing; feature extraction; hearing; signal representation; smoothing methods; spectral analysis; speech processing; automatic systems; common-period sounds; computational auditory scene analysis; correlogram; discrete representation; human auditory scene analysis; human listeners; perceptual data; periodic sounds representation; short-term autocorrelation; single frequency channel; smoothed spectral envelope; sound mixtures separation; subband envelopes; time-varying periodicity; voice mixture; Acoustic noise; Autocorrelation; Computer displays; Computer science; Frequency; Humans; Image analysis; Predictive models; Psychoacoustic models; Radio spectrum management;
Conference_Titel :
Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 1997. ICASSP-97., 1997 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7919-0
DOI :
10.1109/ICASSP.1997.596186