Small room acoustics are characterized by a limited number of dominant low-frequency room modes which result in wide spatio-pressure variations that traditional room-correction systems find elusive to correct over a broad listening area. A psychoacoustic-based methodology is proposed whereby signal components coincident only with problematic modes are filtered and substituted by virtual-bass components to forge an illusion of the suppressed frequencies. A scalable and hierarchical approach is studied using the Chameleon Subwoofer Array (CSA) and subjective evaluation confirms a uniform large-area performance. Bass synthesis exploits parallel nonlinear and phase vocoder generators with outputs blended as a function of transient and steady-state signal content.
Authors:
Hawksford, Malcolm O.; Hill, Adam J.
Affiliation:
University of Essex, Colchester, UK
AES Convention:
129 (November 2010)
Paper Number:
8313
Publication Date:
November 4, 2010
Subject:
Room Acoustics
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