Accuracy of head-related transfer functions synthesized with spherical microphone arrays

Cesar D.Salvador Castaneda, Shuichi Sakamoto, Jorge A.Trevino Lopez, Junfeng Li, Yonghong Yan, Yoiti Suzuki

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículo de la conferenciarevisión exhaustiva

11 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

The spherical harmonic decomposition can be applied to present realistically localized sound sources over headphones. The acoustic field, measured by a spherical microphone array, is first decomposed into a weighted sum of spherical harmonics evaluated at the microphone positions. The resulting decomposition is used to generate a set of virtual sources at various angles. The virtual sources are thus binaurally presented by applying the corresponding head-related transfer functions (HRTF). Reproduction accuracy is heavily dependent on the spatial distribution of microphones and virtual sources. Nearly-uniform sphere samplings are used in positioning the microphones so as to improve spatial accuracy. However, no previous studies have looked into the optimal arrangement for the virtual sources. We evaluate the effects of the virtual source distribution on the accuracy of the synthesized HRTF. Furthermore, our study considers the impact of spatial aliasing for a 252-channel spherical microphone array. The microphone's body is modeled as a human-head-sized rigid sphere. We evaluate the synthesis error by comparison with the target HRTF using the logarithmic spectral distance. Our study finds that 362 virtual sources, distributed on an icosahedral grid, can synthesize the HRTF in the horizontal plane up to 9 kHz with a log-spectral distance below 5 dB.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo055085
PublicaciónProceedings of Meetings on Acoustics
Volumen19
DOI
EstadoPublicada - 2013
Publicado de forma externa
Evento21st International Congress on Acoustics, ICA 2013 - 165th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America - Montreal, QC, Canadá
Duración: 2 jun. 20137 jun. 2013

Huella

Profundice en los temas de investigación de 'Accuracy of head-related transfer functions synthesized with spherical microphone arrays'. En conjunto forman una huella única.

Citar esto