Title :
History and future of auditory filter models
Author :
Lyon, Richard F. ; Katsiamis, Andreas G. ; Drakakis, Emmanuel M.
Author_Institution :
Google, Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA
fDate :
May 30 2010-June 2 2010
Abstract :
Auditory filter models have a history of over a hundred years, with explicit bio-mimetic inspiration at many stages along the way. From passive analogue electric delay line models, through digital filter models, active analogue VLSI models, and abstract filter shape models, these filters have both represented and driven the state of progress in auditory research. Today, we are able to represent a wide range of linear and nonlinear aspects of the psychophysics and physiology of hearing with a rather simple and elegant set of circuits or computations that have a clear connection to underlying hydrodynamics and with parameters calibrated to human performance data. A key part of the progress in getting to this stage has been the experimental clarification of the nature of cochlear nonlinearities, and the modelling work to map these experimental results into the domain of circuits and systems. No matter how these models are built into machine-hearing systems, their bio-mimetic roots will remain key to their performance. In this paper we review some of these models, explain their advantages and disadvantages and present possible ways of implementing them. As an example, a continuous-time analogue CMOS implementation of the One Zero Gammatone Filter (OZGF) is presented together with its automatic gain control that models its level-dependent nonlinear behaviour.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; VLSI; audio signal processing; biomimetics; digital filters; hearing; abstract filter shape model; active analogue VLSI model; analogue electric delay line model; auditory filter model; biomimetics; cochlear nonlinearities; continuous-time analogue CMOS implementation; digital filter model; hydrodynamics; machine-hearing systems; one zero gammatone filter; physiology; psychophysics; Active shape model; Auditory system; Delay lines; Digital filters; History; Passive filters; Physiology; Psychology; Semiconductor device modeling; Very large scale integration;
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems (ISCAS), Proceedings of 2010 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Paris
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5308-5
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5309-2
DOI :
10.1109/ISCAS.2010.5537724