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PAPERS |
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Spatial Quality Evaluation for Reproduced Sound: Terminology, Meaning, and a Scene-Based Paradigm
(PDF-202K) |
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Francis Rumsey |
651 |
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Improving the quality of spatial reproduction suffers because of an
incomplete definition of the subjective attributes that contribute to
the experience of space. Moreover, the lexicon of spatial concepts is
often ambiguous and ill defined. This review of existing standards and
research highlights the problem of extending controlled laboratory
results to real applications of sound reproduction, especially when
different goals, such as evaluating equipment versus modeling human
perception, are involved. |
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Describing Telephone Speech Codec Quality Degradations by Means of Impairment Factors
(PDF-189K) |
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Sebastian Möller and Jens Berger |
667 |
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Predicting the quality of a telephone channel with multiple sources of
degradations from a variety of codecs is a labor-intensive activity that
must be repeated for each condition. The authors propose a perceptually
based model that produces a single equipment impairment index as a way
to approximate the degradation contributed by a particular device.
Preliminary results suggest that the proposed algorithm, based on
auditory tests, provides insight into the expected results. |
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Low-Crest-Factor Multitone Test Signals for Audio Testing
(PDF-276K) |
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Alexander Potchinkov |
681 |
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Test signals composed of a large number of discrete frequencies offer
the advantage of high-speed measurements and the ability to simulate the
spectrum of natural audio under controlled conditions. However,
selecting the phase relationship to minimize the crest factor becomes a
special problem. Minimizing the crest factor increases the signal power
for a fixed clipping level. This paper shows that ad hoc schemes are
useful but often inferior to a formal optimization, and that they should
not be used if enough compute time is available for a theoretical
optimization. |
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ENGINEERING REPORTS |
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About the 10-dB Switch of a Condenser Microphone in Audio Frequency Circuits
(PDF-143K) |
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Holger Pastillé and Martin Ochmann |
695 |
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Because high sound levels can overload the input preamplifier of a
condenser microphone, one of two techniques is typically used to reduce
the level: switching a parallel capacitor across the microphone or
reducing the polarizing voltage. Both techniques reduce the signal level
but with very different effects on nonlinearity. This paper explores
both the mathematical and practical implications of level reduction,
with a warning to users faced with an overload condition. |
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STANDARDS AND INFORMATION DOCUMENTS |
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AES Standards Committee News
(PDF-29K) |
703 |
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Internet communications update; synchronization; forensic audio;
microphone measurement; listening tests; audio connections
Survey: Fiber Optic Connectors
(PDF-12K) |
insert |
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FEATURES |
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21st Conference Report, St. Petersburg
(PDF-1.0MB) |
710 |
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23rd Conference, Copenhagen, Call for Papers
(PDF-19K) |
737 |
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24th Conference, Banff, Call for Contributions
(PDF-21K) |
738 |
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DEPARTMENTS |
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Review of Acoustical Patents
(PDF-152K) |
708 |
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News of the Sections
(PDF-117K) |
718 |
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Sound Track
(PDF-18K) |
725 |
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Upcoming Meetings
(PDF-23K) |
726 |
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New Products and Developments
(PDF-236K) |
727 |
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Available Literature
(PDF-13K) |
731 |
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Membership Information
(PDF-681K) |
732 |
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Advertiser Internet Directory
(PDF-25K) |
734 |
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In Memoriam
(PDF-22K) |
736 |
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AES Special Publications
(PDF-87K) |
741 |
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Sections Contacts Directory
(PDF-37K) |
746 |
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AES Conventions and Conferences
(PDF-49K) |
752 |
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EXTRAS |
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Cover & Sustaining Members List
(PDF-32K) |
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VIP List & Editorial Staff
(PDF-28K) |
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Ads In This Issue
(HTML) |
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Download Entire Journal As One PDF
(PDF-3.4MB) |
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