An extended two-dimensional vocal tract model for fast acoustic simulation of single-axis symmetric three-dimensional tubes
This work addresses computational efficiency in acoustic simulation for vocal tract analysis, though it is incremental as it builds on existing 2D methods.
The paper tackles the problem of simulating three-dimensional vocal tract acoustics efficiently by extending a 2D wave solver to include tube depth, enabling faster simulation of symmetric 3D tubes with reduced resolution requirements, achieving a speed boost in static vowel modeling.
The simulation of two-dimensional (2D) wave propagation is an affordable computational task and its use can potentially improve time performance in vocal tracts' acoustic analysis. Several models have been designed that rely on 2D wave solvers and include 2D representations of three-dimensional (3D) vocal tract-like geometries. However, until now, only the acoustics of straight 3D tubes with circular cross-sections have been successfully replicated with this approach. Furthermore, the simulation of the resulting 2D shapes requires extremely high spatio-temporal resolutions, dramatically reducing the speed boost deriving from the usage of a 2D wave solver. In this paper, we introduce an in-progress novel vocal tract model that extends the 2D Finite-Difference Time-Domain wave solver (2.5D FDTD) by adding tube depth, derived from the area functions, to the acoustic solver. The model combines the speed of a light 2D numerical scheme with the ability to natively simulate 3D tubes that are symmetric in one dimension, hence relaxing previous resolution requirements. An implementation of the 2.5D FDTD is presented, along with evaluation of its performance in the case of static vowel modeling. The paper discusses the current features and limits of the approach, and the potential impact on computational acoustics applications.