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Angelo Farina, Fabio Bozzoli |
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Evaluation of the acoustical confort inside a
car, in terms of speech intellegibility |
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Objective rating of both electroacoustical
devices (sound system) and of natural communication between passengers |
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Evaluation of the bi-directional performances of
hands-free communication systems |
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It is possible to derive the MTF values from a
single impulse response measurement: |
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If the background noise is superposed to the
impulse response, the previous method already takes care of it, and the MTF
values are measured correctly |
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However, in some cases, it is advisable to
perform a noise-free measurement of the IR, and then insert the effect of
the noise with the following expression: |
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A B&K type 4100 head and torso simulator was
selected, after careful comparative tests performed in an anechoic chamber,
which demonstrated its superiority to other binaural microphones (Neumann,
Cortex, Head Acoustics) when employed for measuring impulse responses |
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The mouth simulator was built inside a wooden
dummy head, employing low-cost parts. Its compliance with the ITU
recommendation was confirmed by means of anechoic directivity tests. |
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In both cases, the anechoic directivity
measurements were performed employing a rotating table, directly
synchronized with the sound board employed for measuring the impulse
response. The Aurora software generates the required pulses on the right
channel, which cause the rotating board to advance. |
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The simmetry revealed to be quite good, and the
listening test of the sequence of impulse responses gives the impression of
a pulsive source rotating around. |
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The binaural microphone exhibit the typical
response of a dummy head, with significant boost around 4-5 kHz. |
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The mouth simulator is flat between 200 and 1000
Hz, and requires substantial equalization outside this interval |
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The spectrum of the emitted test signal should
correspond to the prescriptions of ITU T-P50 Recommendation. |
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The overall SPL should be 67 dB(A) at 1m, on
axis, for STI standard measurements |
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The MLS signal is prefiltered, so that the
frequency response, measured at 1m in front of the mouth, complies with the
IEC spectrum. |
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The filtering is performed by means of the
grahic equalizer incorporated in Cool Edit Pro. |
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The measured IR is saved as a TIM file, and
processed with MLSSA |
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The measured IR is saved as a TIM file, and
processed with MLSSA |
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The values of m(F) obtained by the measurement
without noise were corrected for the S/N ratio, and compared with the m(F)
values measured with noise |
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The hardware and software developed allows for
quick and reliable measurement of STI in cars. |
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The background noise can be present during the
actual measurement: however, it is possible to add its effect later, in two
different ways: |
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Mixing a noise recording over the re-recorded
MLS signal, prior of IR deconvolution (yet to be assessed) |
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Correcting the MTF values with the theoretical
relationship, knowing the levels of the signal and of the noise (ideal
method when only the noise spectral values are known, and no recording is
available) |
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The methodology developed, however, allows also
for the creation of sound samples, containing speech (convolved with the
noiseless IR) and background noise: these sound samples can be employed for
listening tests. |
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