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AES San Francisco's April meeting was held at the Creative Advanced
Technology Center in Scotts Valley, California. The meeting attracted forty-five audio professionals from the San Francisco Bay Area. Michael Goodwin, Jean Laroche, and Jean-Marc Jot are researchers at Creative developing new applications of digital audio processing. The three were introduced by Mark Dolson, Director of Audio Research at Creative. Michael Goodwin described the use of digital processing to make changes to commonly recognized sound qualities such as "punchiness," "crispness," and "warmth." Processing is done using a series of digital signal modification modules controlled by an "interpolation engine" which maps high-level user inputs to low-level processing parameters. Soft-decision transient detection improves robustness, minimizes artifacts, and leads to sound modifications that are pleasing to the ears. Jean Laroche demonstrated the use of frequency-domain processing to produce high-fidelity modifications of the human voice. Voice characteristics are mainly determined by frequency peaks in the spectral envelope, known as formants. Frequency-domain processing enables voice pitch to be modified independently of formants, at the cost of 30-40 milliseconds of processing latency. The pitch is determined by cross correlating the magnitude spectrum with a comb frequency pattern, and the harmonics are then simply cut and pasted as desired. A male voice can be made to sound female, or an ordinary voice can sound like a professional announcer. Jean-Marc Jot talked about "Spatial Audio via Loudspeakers and Headphones." He described a software application which allows three dimensional audio rendering and enhances the listening experience by processing surround sound. Sound can be optimized for various playback configurations, on loudspeakers, headphones, or a personal computer. The evening's presentations were followed by a lively question and answer session. Mark Dolson pointed out that the ultimate test of research at Creative is whether new developments enhance the quality of Creative products and provide better sound to the consumer. by Paul Howard and Tom Merklein |
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