Thushara Abhayapala

SD
3papers
56citations
Novelty50%
AI Score23

3 Papers

SDAug 8, 2020
A Novel Method for Obtaining Diffuse Field Measurements for Microphone Calibration

Noman Akbar, Glenn Dickins, Mark R. P. Thomas et al.

We propose a straightforward and cost-effective method to perform diffuse soundfield measurements for calibrating the magnitude response of a microphone array. Typically, such calibration is performed in a diffuse soundfield created in reverberation chambers, an expensive and time-consuming process. A method is proposed for obtaining diffuse field measurements in untreated environments. First, a closed-form expression for the spatial correlation of a wideband signal in a diffuse field is derived. Next, we describe a practical procedure for obtaining the diffuse field response of a microphone array in the presence of a non-diffuse soundfield by the introduction of random perturbations in the microphone location. Experimental spatial correlation data obtained is compared with the theoretical model, confirming that it is possible to obtain diffuse field measurements in untreated environments with relatively few loudspeakers. A 30 second test signal played from 4-8 loudspeakers is shown to be sufficient in obtaining a diffuse field measurement using the proposed method. An Eigenmike is then successfully calibrated at two different geographical locations.

ASJul 23, 2020
Sound Field Translation and Mixed Source Model for Virtual Applications with Perceptual Validation

Lachlan Birnie, Thushara Abhayapala, Vladimir Tourbabin et al.

Non-interactive and linear experiences like cinema film offer high quality surround sound audio to enhance immersion, however the listener's experience is usually fixed to a single acoustic perspective. With the rise of virtual reality, there is a demand for recording and recreating real-world experiences in a way that allows for the user to interact and move within the reproduction. Conventional sound field translation techniques take a recording and expand it into an equivalent environment of virtual sources. However, the finite sampling of a commercial higher order microphone produces an acoustic sweet-spot in the virtual reproduction. As a result, the technique remains to restrict the listener's navigable region. In this paper, we propose a method for listener translation in an acoustic reproduction that incorporates a mixture of near-field and far-field sources in a sparsely expanded virtual environment. We perceptually validate the method through a Multiple Stimulus with Hidden Reference and Anchor (MUSHRA) experiment. Compared to the planewave benchmark, the proposed method offers both improved source localizability and robustness to spectral distortions at translated positions. A cross-examination with numerical simulations demonstrated that the sparse expansion relaxes the inherent sweet-spot constraint, leading to the improved localizability for sparse environments. Additionally, the proposed method is seen to better reproduce the intensity and binaural room impulse response spectra of near-field environments, further supporting the strong perceptual results.

SDMay 17, 2015
An Efficient Parameterization of the Room Transfer Function

Prasanga Samarasinghe, Thushara Abhayapala, Mark Poletti et al.

This paper proposes an efficient parameterization of the Room Transfer Function (RTF). Typically, the RTF rapidly varies with varying source and receiver positions, hence requires an impractical number of point to point measurements to characterize a given room. Therefore, we derive a novel RTF parameterization that is robust to both receiver and source variations with the following salient features: (i) The parameterization is given in terms of a modal expansion of 3D basis functions. (ii) The aforementioned modal expansion can be truncated at a finite number of modes given that the source and receiver locations are from two sizeable spatial regions, which are arbitrarily distributed. (iii) The parameter weights/coefficients are independent of the source/receiver positions. Therefore, a finite set of coefficients is shown to be capable of accurately calculating the RTF between any two arbitrary points from a predefined spatial region where the source(s) lie and a pre-defined spatial region where the receiver(s) lie. A practical method to measure the RTF coefficients is also provided, which only requires a single microphone unit and a single loudspeaker unit, given that the room characteristics remain stationary over time. The accuracy of the above parameterization is verified using appropriate simulation examples.