SDDec 10, 2021
Mean-square-error-based secondary source placement in sound field synthesis with prior information on desired fieldKeisuke Kimura, Shoichi Koyama, Natsuki Ueno et al.
A method of optimizing secondary source placement in sound field synthesis is proposed. Such an optimization method will be useful when the allowable placement region and available number of loudspeakers are limited. We formulate a mean-square-error-based cost function, incorporating the statistical properties of possible desired sound fields, for general linear-least-squares-based sound field synthesis methods, including pressure matching and (weighted) mode matching, whereas most of the current methods are applicable only to the pressure-matching method. An efficient greedy algorithm for minimizing the proposed cost function is also derived. Numerical experiments indicated that a high reproduction accuracy can be achieved by the placement optimized by the proposed method compared with the empirically used regular placement.
ASNov 22, 2021
Sound Field Reproduction With Weighted Mode Matching and Infinite-Dimensional Harmonic Analysis: An Experimental EvaluationShoichi Koyama, Keisuke Kimura, Natsuki Ueno
Sound field reproduction methods based on numerical optimization, which aim to minimize the error between synthesized and desired sound fields, are useful in many practical scenarios because of their flexibility in the array geometry of loudspeakers. However, the reproduction performance of these methods in a practical environment has not been sufficiently investigated. We evaluate weighted mode matching, which is a sound field reproduction method based on the spherical wavefunction expansion of the sound field, in comparison with conventional pressure matching. We also introduce a method of infinite-dimensional harmonic analysis for estimating the expansion coefficients of the sound field from microphone measurements. Experimental results indicated that weighted mode matching using the expansion coefficients of the transfer functions estimated by the infinite-dimensional harmonic analysis outperforms conventional pressure matching, especially when the number of microphones is small.
ASJun 21, 2021
MeshRIR: A Dataset of Room Impulse Responses on Meshed Grid Points For Evaluating Sound Field Analysis and Synthesis MethodsShoichi Koyama, Tomoya Nishida, Keisuke Kimura et al.
A new impulse response (IR) dataset called "MeshRIR" is introduced. Currently available datasets usually include IRs at an array of microphones from several source positions under various room conditions, which are basically designed for evaluating speech enhancement and distant speech recognition methods. On the other hand, methods of estimating or controlling spatial sound fields have been extensively investigated in recent years; however, the current IR datasets are not applicable to validating and comparing these methods because of the low spatial resolution of measurement points. MeshRIR consists of IRs measured at positions obtained by finely discretizing a spatial region. Two subdatasets are currently available: one consists of IRs in a three-dimensional cuboidal region from a single source, and the other consists of IRs in a two-dimensional square region from an array of 32 sources. Therefore, MeshRIR is suitable for evaluating sound field analysis and synthesis methods. This dataset is freely available at https://sh01k.github.io/MeshRIR/ with some codes of sample applications.