Study and Design of Differential Microphone Arrays - Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen

Study and Design of Differential Microphone Arrays

Buch | Softcover
VIII, 184 Seiten
2014 | 2013
Springer Berlin (Verlag)
978-3-642-42756-5 (ISBN)
149,79 inkl. MwSt
The systematic coverage of differential microphone arrays in this book approaches the topic from a signal processing perspective, developing fundamental theory and algorithms and analyzing the relative performance, and limitations, of varied classes of DMA.

Microphone arrays have attracted a lot of interest over the last few decades since they have the potential to solve many important problems such as noise reduction/speech enhancement, source separation, dereverberation, spatial sound recording, and source localization/tracking, to name a few. However, the design and implementation of microphone arrays with beamforming algorithms is not a trivial task when it comes to processing broadband signals such as speech. Indeed, in most sensor arrangements, the beamformer output tends to have a frequency-dependent response. One exception, perhaps, is the family of differential microphone arrays (DMAs) who have the promise to form frequency-independent responses. Moreover, they have the potential to attain high directional gains with small and compact apertures. As a result, this type of microphone arrays has drawn much research and development attention recently. This book is intended to provide a systematic study of DMAs from a signal processing perspective. The primary objective is to develop a rigorous but yet simple theory

for the design, implementation, and performance analysis of DMAs. The theory includes some signal processing techniques for the design of commonly used first-order, second-order, third-order, and also the general Nth-order DMAs. For each order, particular examples are given on how to form standard directional patterns such as the dipole, cardioid, supercardioid, hypercardioid, subcardioid, and quadrupole. The study demonstrates the performance of the different order DMAs in terms of beampattern, directivity factor, white noise gain, and gain for point sources. The inherent relationship between differential processing and adaptive beamforming is discussed, which provides a better understanding of DMAs and why they can achieve high directional gain. Finally, we show how to design DMAs that can be robust against white noise amplification.

Introduction.- Problem Formulation.- Study and Design of First-Order Differential Arrays.- Study and Design of Second-Order Differential Arrays.- Study and Design of Third-Order Differential Arrays with Three Distinct Nulls.- Minimum-Norm Solution for Robust Differential Arrays.- Study and Design of Differential Arrays with the MacLaurin's Series Approximation.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 9.11.2014
Reihe/Serie Springer Topics in Signal Processing
Zusatzinfo VIII, 184 p.
Verlagsort Berlin
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Gewicht 302 g
Themenwelt Technik Elektrotechnik / Energietechnik
Schlagworte Cardioid • Differential microphone arrays (DMAs) • Dipole • First-order DMA • Hypercardioid • Quadrupole • Robust DMAs • Second-order DMAs • Supercardioid • Third-Order DMAs
ISBN-10 3-642-42756-1 / 3642427561
ISBN-13 978-3-642-42756-5 / 9783642427565
Zustand Neuware
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
Wegweiser für Elektrofachkräfte

von Gerhard Kiefer; Herbert Schmolke; Karsten Callondann

Buch | Hardcover (2024)
VDE VERLAG
48,00