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2013 | Buch

Study and Design of Differential Microphone Arrays

verfasst von: Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen

Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Buchreihe : Springer Topics in Signal Processing

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Über dieses Buch

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.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
Ever since the invention of telephone systems, sound signal acquisition has become an essential part of acoustic and speech processing. Traditionally, sound signals are recorded and processed with the use of a single microphone; but this way of acquisition suffers significant limitations: not only the sound spatial realism is lost but also the flexibility in processing the recorded signal. Indeed, extracting the signal of interest from the noise, reverberation, and competing sources, is confined to a small family of techniques. To preserve the sound fidelity, spatial realism, and increase the processing flexibility in dealing with multiple sources and noise, the concept of microphone arrays has been introduced.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 2. Problem Formulation
Abstract
In this chapter, we explain some important aspects of beam forming and differential arrays. The problem of a DMA design is formulated while we progress in defining some useful concepts. We start with the definition of the steering vector for a plane wave with the conventional anechoic far field model. We give the general definition of the beam pattern as well as its expression for directional arrays. We then derive the gain in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which can be very useful in the evaluation of DMAs under different types of noise. Finally, we discuss the Vander monde matrix, which always appears, explicitly or implicitly, in the design of DMAs.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 3. Study and Design of First-Order Differential Arrays
Abstract
This chapter is dedicated to the study and design of first-order differential microphone arrays. We explores the dipole, cardioid, subcardioid, hypercardioid, and supercardioid.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 4. Study and Design of Second-Order Differential Arrays
Abstract
In this chapter, we study and design the most important second-order differential microphone arrays. We are concerned with the dipole, two types of cardioid, quadrupole, hypercardioid, and supercardioid.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 5. Study and Design of Third-Order Differential Arrays with Three Distinct Nulls
Abstract
In this chapter, we study an important family of third-order differential microphone arrays. In this family, which includes the hypercardioid and supercardioid, the directional patterns have exactly three distinct nulls. This feature simplifies the design of third-order DMAs. We will also see how this approach can be easily generalized to the Nth order.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 6. Minimum-Norm Solution for Robust Differential Arrays
Abstract
In this chapter, we show how the classical adaptive beam forming technique is related to differential arrays. From this important and useful relationship, we then derive a minimum-norm filter for the design of any order differential array, which can be very robust against white noise amplification. This approach exploits the fact that the number of microphones is greater than the order of the DMA plus one. As a result, the more microphones, the more robust is the DMA for a predetermined order. We recall that all known DMAs are designed in such a way that their order plus one is equal to the number of microphones.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Chapter 7. Study and Design of Differential Arrays with the MacLaurin’s Series Approximation
Abstract
In Chapter 2, we showed that the patterns of differential arrays can be obtained from the general definition of the beam pattern by approximating the exponential function with its MacLaurin’s series expansion. In other words, a directional pattern of order N can be obtained from the MacLaurin’s series of order N, as long as this approximation holds. In this chapter, we show how to design differential arrays based on this approach and their relationship to adaptive beam forming. This investigation is far from complete and more can be done; our aim here is just to show the potential of this new concept.
Jacob Benesty, Jingdong Chen
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Study and Design of Differential Microphone Arrays
verfasst von
Jacob Benesty
Jingdong Chen
Copyright-Jahr
2013
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-642-33753-6
Print ISBN
978-3-642-33752-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33753-6

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