AES E-Library

Cepstral Techniques for Transducer Measurement: Part II

As a conclusion to previous work, cepstral analysis is applied to electroacoustic measurements in order to deconvolve room reflections and obtain an anechoic (free-field) result from measurements taken in a reverberant environment. Theoretical limitations of the cepstrum in dealing with bandpass systems are discussed and it is seen that room deconvolution is complicated by the inherent low-frequency high-pass nature of the loudspeaker itself. The phase nature of room reflections is also discussed and it is shown that minimum-phase behavior is still exhibited at the relatively large measurement distances and the modest time window lengths required for adequate low-frequency measurements. This minimum-phase behavior of room reflections helps to simplify the deconvolution process.

 

Author (s):
Affiliation: (See document for exact affiliation information.)
AES Convention: Paper Number:
Publication Date:
Session subject:
Permalink: https://aes2.org/publications/elibrary-page/?id=11453


(1240KB)


Click to purchase paper as a non-member or login as an AES member. If your company or school subscribes to the E-Library then switch to the institutional version. If you are not an AES member Join the AES. If you need to check your member status, login to the Member Portal.

Type:
E-Libary location:
16938
Choose your country of residence from this list:










Skip to content