scholarly journals Audiovisual Tool for understanding Audio concepts for being used in bachelor’s degree programmes

Author(s):  
Jose A. Belloch ◽  
Christian Antoñanzas ◽  
Pablo Gutierrez-Parera ◽  
Mª Angeles Simarro

In the Audio Signal Processing field, there exists difficulties in order to explain different concepts such as, compression, masking, quantization, sampling, among others. Further, most of these concepts require the use of audio laboratories and multiple practical session that must carry out students. Another issue is that there are students that are not able to internalize these concepts straightforwardly and require more practical sessions. In order to address these problems, we have developed an audiovisual tool, designed with Matlab, that can be used for professors and students. This tool allows to analyze, test and apply the audio concepts to real audio signals. The developed tool has been successfully experienced by professors of the audio signal processing field that recommend its use in upcoming academic courses.

Author(s):  
Paulo A.A. Esquef ◽  
Luiz W.P. Biscainho

This chapter reviews audio signal processing techniques related to sound generation via additive synthesis. Particular focus will be put on sinusoidal modeling. Each processing stage involved in obtaining a sinusoidal representation for audio signals is described. Then, synthesis techniques that allow reconstructing an audio signal based on a given parametric representation are presented. Finally, some audio applications where sinusoidal modeling is employed are briefly discussed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Taquet ◽  
Bernard Besserer ◽  
Abdelali Hassaine ◽  
Etienne Decenciere

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anderson Antonio Carvalho Alves ◽  
Lucas Tassoni Andrietta ◽  
Rafael Zinni Lopes ◽  
Fernando Oliveira Bussiman ◽  
Fabyano Fonseca e Silva ◽  
...  

This study focused on assessing the usefulness of using audio signal processing in the gaited horse industry. A total of 196 short-time audio files (4 s) were collected from video recordings of Brazilian gaited horses. These files were converted into waveform signals (196 samples by 80,000 columns) and divided into training (N = 164) and validation (N = 32) datasets. Twelve single-valued audio features were initially extracted to summarize the training data according to the gait patterns (Marcha Batida—MB and Marcha Picada—MP). After preliminary analyses, high-dimensional arrays of the Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCC), Onset Strength (OS), and Tempogram (TEMP) were extracted and used as input information in the classification algorithms. A principal component analysis (PCA) was performed using the 12 single-valued features set and each audio-feature dataset—AFD (MFCC, OS, and TEMP) for prior data visualization. Machine learning (random forest, RF; support vector machine, SVM) and deep learning (multilayer perceptron neural networks, MLP; convolution neural networks, CNN) algorithms were used to classify the gait types. A five-fold cross-validation scheme with 10 repetitions was employed for assessing the models' predictive performance. The classification performance across models and AFD was also validated with independent observations. The models and AFD were compared based on the classification accuracy (ACC), specificity (SPEC), sensitivity (SEN), and area under the curve (AUC). In the logistic regression analysis, five out of the 12 audio features extracted were significant (p < 0.05) between the gait types. ACC averages ranged from 0.806 to 0.932 for MFCC, from 0.758 to 0.948 for OS and, from 0.936 to 0.968 for TEMP. Overall, the TEMP dataset provided the best classification accuracies for all models. The most suitable method for audio-based horse gait pattern classification was CNN. Both cross and independent validation schemes confirmed that high values of ACC, SPEC, SEN, and AUC are expected for yet-to-be-observed labels, except for MFCC-based models, in which clear overfitting was observed. Using audio-generated data for describing gait phenotypes in Brazilian horses is a promising approach, as the two gait patterns were correctly distinguished. The highest classification performance was achieved by combining CNN and the rhythmic-descriptive AFD.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document