WO2014096279A1 - Generation of a comfort noise with high spectro-temporal resolution in discontinuous transmission of audio signals - Google Patents
Generation of a comfort noise with high spectro-temporal resolution in discontinuous transmission of audio signals Download PDFInfo
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- 230000005236 sound signal Effects 0.000 title claims description 30
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 title description 4
- 238000001228 spectrum Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 309
- 230000003595 spectral effect Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 117
- 238000003780 insertion Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 53
- 230000037431 insertion Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 53
- 239000012073 inactive phase Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 38
- 239000012071 phase Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 22
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims description 32
- 238000004590 computer program Methods 0.000 claims description 15
- 230000009466 transformation Effects 0.000 claims description 8
- 230000010076 replication Effects 0.000 claims description 6
- 239000012072 active phase Substances 0.000 description 18
- 238000012935 Averaging Methods 0.000 description 6
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000012545 processing Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000013139 quantization Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000012546 transfer Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000012952 Resampling Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000015572 biosynthetic process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004891 communication Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000007246 mechanism Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 1
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Classifications
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- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis
- G10L19/012—Comfort noise or silence coding
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- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis
- G10L19/002—Dynamic bit allocation
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
- G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES OR SPEECH SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING TECHNIQUES; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING
- G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis
- G10L19/04—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis using predictive techniques
- G10L19/16—Vocoder architecture
- G10L19/18—Vocoders using multiple modes
- G10L19/24—Variable rate codecs, e.g. for generating different qualities using a scalable representation such as hierarchical encoding or layered encoding
Definitions
- the present invention relates to audio signal processing, and, in particular, to comfort noise addition to audio signals.
- Comfort noise generators are usually used in discontinuous transmission (DTX) of audio signals, in particular of audio signals containing speech.
- DTX discontinuous transmission
- the audio signal is first classified in active and inactive frames by a voice activity detector (VAD). Based on the VAD result, only the active speech frames are coded and transmitted at the nominal bit-rate.
- VAD voice activity detector
- SID frames silence insertion descriptor frames
- the noise is generated during the inactive frames at the decoder side by a comfort noise generator (CNG).
- CNG comfort noise generator
- the size of an SID frame is very limited in practice. Therefore, the number of parameters describing the background noise has to be kept as small as possible.
- the noise estimation is not applied directly in the output of the spectral transforms. Instead, it is applied at a lower spectral resolution by averaging the input power spectrum among groups of bands, e.g., following the Bark scale. The averaging can be achieved either by arithmetic or geometric means.
- the limited number of parameters transmitted in the SID frames does not allow to capture the fine spectral structure of the background noise. Hence only the smooth spectra! envelope of the noise can be reproduced by the CNG.
- the discrepancy between the smooth spectrum of the reconstructed comfort noise and the spectrum of the actual background noise can become very audible at the transitions between active frames (involving regular coding and decoding of a noisy speech portion of the signal) and CNG frames.
- An object of the present invention is to provide improved concepts for audio signal processing. More particular, an object of the present invention is to provide improved concepts for comfort noise addition to audio signals.
- the object of the present invention is achieved by an audio decoder according to claim 1 , by a system according to claim 17, by a method according to claim 18 and by a computer program according to claim 19.
- the invention provides an audio decoder being configured for decoding a bitstream so as to produce therefrom an audio output signal, the bitstream comprising at least an active phase followed by at least an inactive phase, wherein the bitstream has encoded therein at least a silence insertion descriptor frame which describes a spectrum of a background noise
- the audio decoder comprising: a silence insertion descriptor decoder configured to decode the silence insertion descriptor frame so as to reconstruct a spectrum of the background noise; a decoding device configured to reconstruct the audio output signal from the bitstream during the active phase; a spectral converter configured to determine a spectrum of the audio output signal; a noise estimator device configured to determine a first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the spectrum of the audio output signal provided by the spectral converter, wherein the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal has a higher spectral resolution than the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decod- er; a resolution converter configured to establish
- the bitstream contains active phases and inactive phases, wherein an active phase is a phase, which contains wanted components of the audio information, such as speech or music, whereas an inactive phase is a phase, which does not contain any wanted components of the audio information.
- Inactive phases usually occur during pauses, where no wanted components, such as music or speech, are present. Therefore, inactive phases usually contain solely background noise.
- the information in the bitstream containing an encoded audio signal is embedded in so called frames, wherein each of these frames contain audio information referring to a certain time.
- active frames comprising audio information including audio in- formation regarding the wanted signal may be transmitted within the bit- stream.
- silence insertion descriptor frames comprising noise information may be transmitted within the bitstream at a lower average bit-rate compared to the average bit-rate of the active phases.
- the silence insertion descriptor decoder is configured to decode the silence insertion descriptor frames so as to reconstruct a spectrum of the background noise.
- this spectrum of the background noise does not allow to capture the fine spectral structure of the background noise due to a limited number of parameters transmitted in the silence insertion descriptor frames.
- the decoding device may be a device or a computer program capable of decoding the audio bitstream, which is a digital data stream containing audio information, during active phases.
- the decoding process may result in a digital decoded audio output signal, which may be fed to a D/A converter to pro- prise an analogous audio signal, which then may be fed to a loudspeaker, in order to produce an audible signal.
- the spectral converter may obtain a spectrum of the audio output signal which has a significantly higher spectral resolution than the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder.
- the noise estimator may determine a first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the spectrum of the audio output signal provided by the spectral converter, wherein the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal has a higher spectral resolution than the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder.
- the resolution converter may establish a second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal, wherein the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal has a same spectral resolution as the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder.
- the scaling factor computing device may easily compute scaling factors for a spectrum for a comfort noise based on the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder and based on the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal as provided by the resolution converter as the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder and the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal have the same spectral resolution.
- the comfort noise spectrum generator may establish the spectrum for the comfort noise based on the scaling factors and based on the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal as provided by the noise estimation device. Furthermore, the comfort noise generator may produce the comfort noise during the inactive phase based on the spectrum for the comfort noise.
- the noise estimates obtained at the decoder contain information about the spectral structure of the background noise, which is more accurate than the information about the smooth spectral envelope of the background noise contained in the SID frames. However, these estimates cannot be updated during inactive phases since the noise estimation is carried out on the decoded audio output signal during active phases. In contrast, the SID frames deliver new information about the spectral envelope during inactive phases.
- the de- coder according to the invention combines these two sources of information.
- the scaling factors may be updated during active phases depending on the noise estimates at the decoder side and during inactive phases depending on the noise estimates contained in the SID frames. The continuous update of the scaling factors ensures that there are no sudden changes of the charac- teristics of the produced comfort noise.
- the update of the scaling factors and, hence, of the comfort noise can be done in an easy way, as for each frequency band group of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames exactly one frequency band group exists in the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal. It has to be noted that in a preferred embodiment the frequency band groups of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames and the frequency band groups of the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal correspond to each other.
- the update of the scaling factors produces no or only barely audible artifacts.
- the spectral analyzer comprises a fast Fourier transformation device.
- a fast Fourier transform is an algorithm to compute a discrete Fourier transform (DFT) and it's inverse, which requires only low computational effort. Therefore, the fast Fourier transformation device may calculate the spectrum of the audio output signal in an easy way.
- the noise estimator device at the decoder comprises a converter device configured to convert the spectrum of the audio output signal into a converted spectrum of the audio output signal which has in general a much lower spectral resolution.
- the noise estimator device comprises a noise estimator configured to determine the first spec- trum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the converted spectrum of the audio output signal provided by the converter device.
- a noise estimator configured to determine the first spec- trum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the converted spectrum of the audio output signal provided by the converter device.
- S FR (i) denotes a scaling factor for a frequency band group i of the comfort noise
- Nsm(0 denotes a level of a frequency band group i of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames
- 3 ⁇ 4 c denotes a level of a frequency band group i of the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal
- i 0, ...
- the comfort noise spectrum generator is configured to compute the spectrum of the comfort noise based on the scaling factors and based on the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal as provided by the noise estimation device.
- the comfort noise spectrum may be computed in such way that it has the spectral resolution of the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal, which is in general much higher than the spectral resolution obtained from SID frames.
- the resolution converter comprises a first converter stage configured to establish a third spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal, wherein the spectral resolution of the third spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal is higher or the same as the spectral resolution of the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal, and wherein the resolution converter comprises a second converter stage configured to establish the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal.
- the comfort noise spectrum generator is configured to compute the spectrum of the comfort noise based on the scaling factors and based on the third spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal as provided by the first converter stage of the resolution converter.
- a comfort noise spectrum may be obtained during inactive phases which has a higher spectral resolution than spectral resolution of the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal during active phases.
- NTM c (/c) N FR (k) denotes a level of a frequency band k of the spectrum of the comfort noise
- S LR (Q denotes a scaling factor of a frequency band group ⁇ of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames and of the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal
- N e R c (/c) denotes a level of a frequency band k of the third spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal
- L LR is the number of frequency band groups of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames and of the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal.
- the comfort noise generator comprises a first fast Fourier converter configured to adjust levels of frequency bands of the comfort noise in a fast Fourier transformation domain and a second fast Fourier converter to produce at least a part of the comfort noise based on an output of the first fast Fourier converter.
- the decoding device comprises a core decoder configured to produce the audio output signal dur- ing the active phase.
- a simple structure of the decoder may be achieved which is suitable for narrowband (NB) and wideband (WB) applications.
- the decoding device comprises a core decoder configured to produce an audio signal and a bandwidth extension module configured to produce the audio output signal based on the audio signal as provided by the core decoder.
- a simple structure of the decoder may be achieved which is suitable for super wideband (SWB) applications.
- the bandwidth extension module comprises a spectral band replication decoder, a quadrature mirror filter analyzer, and/or a quadrature mirror filter synthesizer.
- the comfort noise as provided by the fast Fourier converter is fed to the bandwidth extension module.
- the comfort noise as provided by the fast Fourier converter may be transformed into a comfort noise with a higher bandwidth.
- the comfort noise gen- erator comprises a quadrature mirror filter adjuster device configured to adjust levels of frequency bands of the comfort noise in a quadrature mirror filter domain, wherein an output of the quadrature mirror filter synthesizer is fed to the bandwidth extension module.
- the invention relates to a system comprising a decoder and an encoder, wherein the decoder is designed according to the invention.
- the invention in another aspect relates to a method of decoding an audio bit- stream so as to produce therefrom an audio output signal, the bitstream comprising at least an active phase followed by at least an inactive phase, wherein the bitstream has encoded therein at least a silence insertion de- scriptor frame which describes a spectrum of a background noise, the method comprising the steps: decoding the silence insertion descriptor frame so as to reconstruct a spectrum of the background noise; reconstructing the audio output signal from the bitstream during the active phase; determining a spectrum of the audio output signal; determining a first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the spectrum of the audio output signal, wherein the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal has a higher spectral resolution than the spectrum of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder; establishing a second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal based on the first spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal, wherein the second spectrum of the noise of the audio output signal has the same spectral resolution as
- the invention relates to a computer program for perform- ing, when running on a computer or a processor, the inventive method.
- Preferred embodiments of the invention are subsequently discussed with respect to the accompanying drawings, in which: illustrates a first embodiment of a decoder according to the invention; illustrates a second embodiment of a decoder according to the invention; illustrates a third embodiment of a decoder according to the invention; illustrates a first embodiment of an encoder suitable for an inventive system; and illustrates a second embodiment of an encoder suitable for an inventive system.
- Fig. 1 illustrates a first embodiment of a decoder 1 according to the invention.
- the audio decoder 1 depicted in Fig. 1 is configured for decoding a bitstream BS so as to produce therefrom an audio output signal OS, the bitstream BS comprising at least an active phase followed by at least an inactive phase, wherein the bitstream BS has encoded therein at least a silence insertion descriptor frame SI which describes a spectrum SBN of a background noise, the audio decoder 1 comprising: a decoding device 2 configured to reconstruct the audio output signal OS from the bitstream BS during the active phase; a silence insertion descriptor decoder 3 configured to decode the silence insertion descriptor frame SI so as to reconstruct the spectrum SBN of the background noise; a spectral converter 4 configured to determine a spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS; a noise estimator device 5 configured to determine a first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS based on the spectrum SAS of the audio output signal AS provided by the
- the bitstream BS contains active phases and inactive phases, wherein an active phase is a phase, which contains wanted components of the audio information, such as speech or music, whereas an inactive phase is a phase, which does not contain any wanted components of the audio information.
- Inactive phases usually occur during pauses, where no wanted components, such as music or speech, are present. Therefore, inactive phases usually contain solely background noise.
- the information in the bitstream BS containing an encoded audio signal is embedded in so called frames, wherein each of these frames contain audio information referring to a certain time.
- active frames comprising audio information including audio information regarding the wanted signal may be transmitted within the bitstream BS.
- silence insertion descriptor frames SI SI comprising noise information may be transmitted within the bitstream at a lower average bit-rate compared to the average bit-rate of the active phases.
- the decoding device 2 may be a device or a computer program capable of decoding the audio bitstream BS, which is a digital data stream containing audio information, during active phases.
- the decoding process may result in a digital decoded audio output signal OS, which may be fed to a D/A converter to produce an analogous audio signal, which then may be fed to a loudspeaker, in order to produce an audible signal.
- the silence insertion descriptor decoder 3 is configured to decode the silence insertion descriptor frames SI so as to reconstruct a spectrum SBN of the background noise.
- this spectrum SBN of the background noise does not allow to capture the fine spectral structure of the background noise due to a limited number of parameters transmitted in the silence insertion descriptor frames SI.
- the spectral converter 4 may obtain a spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS which has a significantly higher spectral resolution than the spectrum SBN of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder 3. Therefore, the noise estimator 10 may determine a first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS based on the spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS provided by the spectral converter 4, wherein the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS has a higher spectral resolution than the spectrum of the background noise SBN.
- the resolution converter 6 may establish a second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS based on the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS, wherein the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS has a same spectral resolution as the spectrum of the background noise SBN.
- the scaling factor computing device 7a may easily compute scaling factors SF for a spectrum SCN for a comfort noise CN based on the spectrum SBN of the background noise as provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder 3 and based on the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS as provided by the resolution converter 6 as the spectrum SBN of the background noise and the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS have the same spectral resolution.
- the comfort noise spectrum generator 7b may establish the spectrum SCN for the comfort noise CN based on the scaling factors SF.
- the comfort noise generator 8 may produce the comfort noise CN during the inactive phase based on the spectrum SCN for the comfort noise.
- the noise estimates obtained at the decoder 1 contain information about the spectral structure of the background noise, which is more accurate than the information about the spectral structure of the background noise contained in the SID frames SI. However, these estimates cannot be adapted during inactive phases since the noise estimation is carried out on the decoded audio output signal OS. In contrast, the SID frames deliver new information about the spectral envelope at regular intervals during inactive phases.
- the decoder 1 according to the invention combines these two sources of information.
- the scaling factors SF may be updated during active phases depending on the noise estimates at the decoder side and during inactive phases depending on the noise estimates contained in the SID frames SI. The continuous update of the scaling factors SF ensures that there are no sudden changes of the characteristics of the produced comfort noise CN.
- the update of the scaling factors SF and, hence, of the comfort noise CN can be done in an easy way, as for each frequency band group of the spectrum SBN of the background noise as contained in the SID frames SI exactly one frequency band group exists in the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS. It has to be noted that in a preferred embodiment the frequency band groups of the spectrum of the background noise as contained in the SID frames SI and the frequency band groups of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS correspond to each other.
- the update of the scaling factors SF produces no or only barely audible artifacts.
- the spectral analyzer 4 comprises a fast Fourier transformation device.
- a fast Fourier transform (FFT) is an algorithm to compute a discrete Fourier transform (DFT) and it's inverse, which requires only low computational effort. Therefore, the fast Fourier transformation device may calculate the spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS in an easy way.
- the noise estimator device 5 comprises a converter device 9 configured to convert the spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS into a converted spectrum CSA of the audio output signal OS which has the same spectral resolution as the core decoder 1 7.
- the spectral resolution of the spectrum SAS of the audio output signal OS obtained by a spectral converter 4 is much higher than the spectral resolution of the core decoder 17.
- the noise estimator device 5 comprises a noise estimator 10 configured to determine the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS based on the converted spectrum CAS of the audio output signal OS provided by the converter device 9.
- the converted spectrum CSA of the audio output signal OS is used as a basis for the noise estimation at the decoder computational efforts may be reduced without lowering the quality of the noise estimation.
- the scaling factor computing device 7a is configured to compute the scaling factors SF according to the formula
- S LR i) , wherein S FR (i) denotes a scaling factor SF for a frequency
- band group i of the comfort noise CN wherein ⁇ 3 ⁇ 43 ⁇ 4( ⁇ ) denotes a level of a frequency band group i of the spectrum SBN of the background noise, wherein / ⁇ c (0 denotes a level of a frequency band group i of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal, wherein i - 0, ... , L LR - 1, wherein L LR is the number of frequency band groups of the spectrum SBN of the background noise and of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS.
- the comfort noise spectrum generator 7b is configured to compute the spectrum SCN of the comfort noise CN based on the scaling factors SF and based on the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS as provided by the noise estimation device 5.
- the comfort noise spectrum SCN may be computed in such way that it has the spectral resolution of the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS.
- N FR (k) denotes a level of a frequency band k of the spectrum SCN of the comfort noise CN
- S LR (i) denotes a scaling factor SF of a frequency band group i of the spectrum SBN of the background noise and of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS
- N ⁇ (k denotes a level of a frequency band k of the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS
- k b LR (i), ... , b LR ⁇ i + 1) - 1, wherein b LR i) is a first frequency band of one of the frequency band groups, in i— 0, ...
- L LR is the number of frequency band groups of the spectrum SBN of the background noise and of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal.
- the resolution converter 6 comprises a first converter stage 1 1 configured to establish a third spectrum SN3 of the noise of the audio output signal OS based on the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS, wherein the spectral resolution of the third spectrum SN3 of the noise of the audio output signal OS is same or higher as the spectral resolution of the first spectrum SN1 of the noise of the audio output signal OS, and wherein the resolution converter 6 comprises a second converter stage 12 configured to establish the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS.
- the comfort noise spectrum generator 7b is configured to compute the spectrum SCN of the comfort noise CN based on the scaling factors SF and based on the third spectrum SN3 of the noise of the audio output signal OS as provided by the first converter stage 1 1 of the resolution converter 6.
- a comfort noise spectrum SCN may be obtained which has a higher spectral resolution then the background noise spectrum SBN provided by the silence insertion descriptor decoder 3.
- N FR (k) denotes a level of a frequency band k of the spectrum SCN of the comfort noise CN
- S LR (i) denotes a scaling factor SF of a frequency band group i of the spectrum SCN of the background noise and of the second spectrum SN2 of the noise of the audio output signal OS
- the comfort noise generator 8 comprises a first fast Fourier converter 1 5 configured to adjust levels of frequency bands of the comfort noise CN in a fast Fourier transformation domain and a second fast Fourier converter 16 to produce at least a part of the comfort noise CN based on an output of the first fast Fourier converter 15.
- the decoding device 2 comprises a core decoder 17 configured to produce the audio output signal OS during the active phase.
- a simple structure of the decoder may be achieved which is suitable for narrowband (NB) and wideband (WB) applications.
- the audio decoder 1 comprises a header reading device 18, which is configured to discriminate between active phases and inactive phase.
- the header reading device 18 is further configured to switch a switch device 19 in such way that the bitstream BS during active phases is fed to the core decoder 17 and that the silence insertion descriptor frames during the inactive phases are fed to the silence insertion descriptor decoder 3.
- an inactive phase flag is transmitted to the background noise generator 8 so that the generation of the comfort noise CN may be triggered.
- Fig. 2 illustrates a second embodiment of an audio decoder 1 according to the invention.
- the decoder 1 depicted in Fig. 2 is based on the decoder 1 of Fig. 1 .
- the audio de- coder 1 of a second embodiment of the invention comprises a bandwidth extension module 20 to which the output signal of the core decoder 17 is fed.
- the bandwidth extension module 20 is configured to produce a bandwidth extended output signal EOS based on the audio output signal OS.
- SWB super wideband
- the comfort noise CN as provided by the fast Fourier converter 16 is fed to the bandwidth extension module 20.
- the comfort noise CN as provided by the fast Fourier converter 16 may be transformed into a comfort noise CN with a higher bandwidth.
- the comfort noise generator 8 comprises a quadrature mirror filter adjuster device 24 configured to adjust levels of frequency bands of the comfort noise CN in a quadrature mir- ror filter domain, wherein an output of the quadrature mirror filter synthesizer 24 is fed to the bandwidth extension module 20 as an additional comfort noise CN'.
- QMF levels contained in the silence insertion descriptor frames SI may be fed to the quadrature mirror filter synthesizer device 24.
- the bandwidth extension module 20 comprises a spectral band replication decoder 21 , a quadra- ture mirror filter analyzer 22, and/or a quadrature mirror filter synthesizer 23.
- Fig. 3 illustrates a third embodiment of a decoder 1 according to the invention.
- the decoder 1 of Fig. 3 is based on the decoder 1 of Fig. 2. The following only the differences to be discussed.
- the decoding device 2 comprises a core decoder 17 configured to produce an audio signal AS and a bandwidth extension module 20 configured to produce the audio output signal OS based on the audio signal AS as provided by the core decoder 17.
- a simple structure of the decoder may be achieved which is suitable for super wideband (SWB) applications.
- the bandwidth extension module 20 of Fig. 3 is the same as the bandwidth extension module 20 of Fig. 2.
- the bandwidth extension module 20 is used to produce the audio output signal OS, which is fed to the spectral converter 4.
- the entire bandwidth can be used for producing comfort noise.
- a random generator 8 may be applied to excite each individual spectral band in the FFT domain, as well as in the QMF domain for SWB modes.
- the amplitude of the random sequences should be individually computed in each band such that the spectrum of the generated comfort noise CN resembles the spectrum of the actual background noise present in the bitstream.
- the high-resolution noise estimates obtained at the decoder 1 capture information about the fine spectral structure of the background noise. However, these estimates cannot be adapted during inactive phases since the noise estimation is carried out on the decoded signal OS. In contrast, the SID frames SI deliver new information about the spectral envelope at regular intervals during inactive phases. The present decoder 1 combines these two sources of information in an effort to reproduce the fine spectral structure captured from the background noise present during active phases, while updating only the spectral envelope of the comfort noise CN during inactive parts with the help of the SID information.
- an additional noise estimator 5 is used in the decoder 1 , as shown in Figs. 1 to 3.
- noise estimation is carried out at both sides of the transmission system, but applying a higher spectral resolution at the decoder 1 than at the encoder 100.
- One way to obtain a high spectral resolution at the decoder 1 is to simply consider each spectral band individually (full resolution) instead of grouping them via averaging like in the encoder 100.
- a trade-off between spectral resolution and computational complexity can be obtained by carrying out the spectral grouping also in the decoder 1 but using an increased number of spectral groups compared to the encoder 100, yielding thereby a finer quantization of the frequency axis in the decoder.
- the decoder-side noise estimation operates on the decoded signal OS.
- it should be therefore capable of operating during active phases only, i.e., necessarily on clean speech or noisy speech contents (in contrast to noise only).
- the high-resolution (HR) noise power spectrum N ⁇ . computed at the decoder may be first interpolated (e.g., using linear interpolation) to provide a full- resolution (FR) power spectrum N c . It may then be converted to a low- resolution (LR) power spectrum by spectral grouping (i.e., averaging) just as done in the encoder.
- the power spectrum N ⁇ c exhibits therefore the same spectral resolution as the noise levels ⁇ 3 ⁇ 43 ⁇ 4 gained from the SID frames SI. Comparing the low-resolution noise spectra N ⁇ c and ⁇ 3 ⁇ 4 ⁇ , the full- resolution noise spectrum N ⁇ c can be finally scaled to yield a full-resolution power spectrum as follows:
- L lR is the number of spectral groups used by the low-resolution noise estimation in the encoder
- the full-resolution noise power spectrum N FR ⁇ ]i) can finally be used to accurately adjust the level of comfort noise generated in each individual FFT or QMF band (the latter for SWB modes only).
- the above mechanism is applied to the FFT coefficients only.
- SWB systems it is not applied in the QMF bands capturing the high-frequency content left over by the core. Since these frequencies are perceptually less relevant, reproducing the smooth spectral envelope of the noise for these frequencies is sufficient in general.
- the system relies solely on the information transmitted by the SID frames.
- the SBR module is thus bypassed when the VAD triggers a CNG frame.
- the CNG module does not take the QMF bands into account since blind bandwidth extension is applied to recover the desired bandwidth.
- the scheme can be easily extended to cover the entire band- width by applying the decoder-side noise estimator at the output of the bandwidth extension module instead of applying it at the output of the core decoder.
- This extension as shown in Fig. 3 causes an increase in computational complexity since the high frequencies captured by the QMF filterbank have to be considered as well.
- Fig. 4 illustrates a first embodiment of an encoder 100 suitable for an inventive system.
- the input audio signal IS is fed to a first spectral converter
- the first spectral converter 25 configured to transfer that time domain signal IS into a frequency domain.
- the first spectral converter 25 may be a quadrature mirror filter analyzer. The output of the first spectral converter 25 is fed to a second spectral converter
- the second spectral converter 26 which is configured to transfer the output of the first spectral converter 25 to a domain.
- the second spectral converter 26 may be a quadrature mirror filter synthesizer.
- the output of the second spectral converter 26 is fed to a third spectral converter 27 which may be a fast Fourier transforming device.
- the output of the third spectral converter 27 is fed to a noise estimator device 28 which consists of a convert device 29 and a noise estimator 30.
- the encoder 100 comprises a signal activity detector 31 which is configured to switch the switch device 32 in such way that during active phases input signal is fed to a core encoder 33 and that in SID frames during inactive phases a noise estimation created by the noise estimating device 28 is fed to a silence insertion descriptor encoder 35. Further, in inactive phases an inactivity flag is fed to a core updater 34.
- the encoder 100 further comprises a bitstream producer 36 which receives silence insertion descriptor frames SI from the silence insertion descriptor encoder 35 and an encoded input signal ISE from the core encoder 33 in order to produce the bitstream BS therefrom.
- Fig. 5 illustrates a second embodiment of an encoder 100 suitable for an inventive system which is based on the encoder 100 of first embodiment.
- the additional features of a second embodiment will briefly be explained in the following.
- the output of the first converter 25 is also fed to the noise estimator device 28.
- a spectral band replication encoder 37 produces an enhancement signal ES which contains information about higher frequencies in the input audio signal IS. That enhancement sig- nal 37 is also transferred to the bitstream producer 36 so as to embed that enhancement signal ES into the bitstream BS.
- a noise estimator 28 is applied at the encoder side to track the spectral shape of the background noise present in the input signal IS, as shown in Figs. 4 and 5
- noise estimation can be applied with any spectro-temporal analysis tool decomposing a time-domain signal into multiple spectral bands, as long as it offers sufficient spectral resolution.
- a QMF filterbank is used as a resampling tool to downsample the input signal to the core sampling rate. It exhibits a significantly lower spectral resolution than the FFT which is applied to the downsampled core signal.
- the core encoder 33 Since the core encoder 33 already covers the entire NB bandwidth and since WB modes rely on blind bandwidth extension, the frequencies above the core bandwidth are irrelevant and can be simply discarded for NB and WB systems. In SWB modes, in contrast, those frequencies are captured by the up- per QMF bands and need to be taken into account explicitly.
- the size of an SID frame SI is very limited in practice. Therefore, the number of parameters describing the background noise has to be kept as small as possible.
- the noise estimation is not applied directly in the output of the spectral transforms. Instead, it is applied at a lower spectral resolution by averaging the input power spectrum among groups of bands, e.g., following the Bark scale. The averaging can be achieved either by arithmetic or geometric means.
- the spectral grouping is carried out for the FFT and QMF domains separately, whereas the NB and WB modes rely on the FFT domain only.
- the estimated noise levels can be jointly encoded in SID frames using vector quantization techniques.
- NB and WB modes only the FFT domain is exploited.
- SWB modes the encoding of SID frames can be performed for both FFT and QMF domains jointly using vector quantization, i.e., resorting to a single codebook covering both domains.
- Some or all of the method steps may be executed by (or using) a hardware apparatus, like for example, a microprocessor, a programmable computer or an electronic circuit. In some embodiments, some one or more of the most important method steps may be executed by such an apparatus.
- embodiments of the invention can be implemented in hardware or in software.
- the implementation can be performed using a non-transitory storage medium such as a digital storage medium, for example a floppy disc, a DVD, a Blu-Ray, a CD, a ROM, a PROM, and EPROM, an EEPROM or a FLASH memory, having electronically readable control signals stored thereon, which cooperate (or are capable of cooperating) with a programmable computer system such that the respective method is performed. Therefore, the digital storage medium may be computer readable.
- Some embodiments according to the invention comprise a data carrier having electronically readable control signals, which are capable of cooperating with a programmable computer system, such that one of the methods described herein is performed.
- embodiments of the present invention can be implemented as a computer program product with a program code, the program code being operative for performing one of the methods when the computer program product runs on a computer.
- the program code may, for example, be stored on a machine readable carrier.
- Other embodiments comprise the computer program for performing one of the methods described herein, stored on a machine readable carrier.
- an embodiment of the inventive method is, therefore, a computer program having a program code for performing one of the methods described herein, when the computer program runs on a computer.
- a further embodiment of the inventive method is, therefore, a data carrier (or a digital storage medium, or a computer-readable medium) comprising, recorded thereon, the computer program for performing one of the methods described herein.
- the data carrier, the digital storage medium or the recorded medium are typically tangible and/or non-transitionary.
- a further embodiment of the invention method is, therefore, a data stream or a sequence of signals representing the computer program for performing one of the methods described herein.
- the data stream or the sequence of signals may, for example, be configured to be transferred via a data communication connection, for example, via the internet.
- a further embodiment comprises a processing means, for example, a computer or a programmable logic device, configured to, or adapted to, perform one of the methods described herein.
- a further embodiment comprises a computer having installed thereon the computer program for performing one of the methods described herein.
- a further embodiment according to the invention comprises an apparatus or a system configured to transfer (for example, electronically or optically) a com- puter program for performing one of the methods described herein to a receiver.
- the receiver may, for example, be a computer, a mobile device, a memory device or the like.
- the apparatus or system may, for example, comprise a file server for transferring the computer program to the receiver .
- a programmable logic device for example, a field programmable gate array
- a field programmable gate array may cooperate with a microprocessor in order to perform one of the methods described herein.
- the methods are preferably performed by any hardware apparatus.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Multimedia (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Audiology, Speech & Language Pathology (AREA)
- Human Computer Interaction (AREA)
- Computational Linguistics (AREA)
- Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
- Signal Processing (AREA)
- Quality & Reliability (AREA)
- Compression, Expansion, Code Conversion, And Decoders (AREA)
- Soundproofing, Sound Blocking, And Sound Damping (AREA)
- Noise Elimination (AREA)
- Reduction Or Emphasis Of Bandwidth Of Signals (AREA)
- Circuit For Audible Band Transducer (AREA)
Abstract
Description
Claims
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MX344169B (en) | 2016-12-07 |
EP2936487B1 (en) | 2016-06-22 |
TW201428734A (en) | 2014-07-16 |
US20150287415A1 (en) | 2015-10-08 |
US9583114B2 (en) | 2017-02-28 |
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