Download Naturalness of Double-Slope Decay in Generalised Active Acoustic Enhancement Systems
Active acoustic enhancement systems (AAESs) alter the perceived acoustics of a space by using microphones and loudspeakers to introduce sound energy into the room. Double-sloped energy decay may be observed in these systems. However, it is unclear as to which conditions lead to this effect, and to what extent double sloping reduces the perceived naturalness of the reverberation compared to Sabine decay. This paper uses simulated combinations of AAES parameters to identify which cases affect the objective curvature of the energy decay. A subjective test with trained listeners assessed the naturalness of these conditions. Using an AAES model, room impulse responses were generated for varying room dimensions, absorption coefficients, channel counts, system loop gains and reverberation times (RTs) of the artificial reverberator. The objective double sloping was strongly correlated to the ratio between the reverberator and passive room RTs, but parameters such as absorption and room size did not have a profound effect on curvature. It was found that double sloping significantly reduced the perceived naturalness of the reverberation, especially when the reverberator RT was greater than two times that of the passive room. Double sloping had more effect on the naturalness ratings when subjects listened to a more absorptive passive room, and also when using speech rather than transient stimuli. Lowering the loop gain by 9 dB increased the naturalness of the doublesloped stimuli, where some were rated as significantly more natural than the Sabine decay stimuli from the passive room.
Download A Common-Slopes Late Reverberation Model Based on Acoustic Radiance Transfer
In rooms with complex geometry and uneven distribution of energy losses, late reverberation depends on the positions of sound sources and listeners. More precisely, the decay of energy is characterised by a sum of exponential curves with position-dependent amplitudes and position-independent decay rates (hence the name common slopes). The amplitude of different energy decay components is a particularly important perceptual aspect that requires efficient modeling in applications such as virtual reality and video games. Acoustic Radiance Transfer (ART) is a room acoustics model focused on late reverberation, which uses a pre-computed acoustic transfer matrix based on the room geometry and materials, and allows interactive changes to source and listener positions. In this work, we present an efficient common-slopes approximation of the ART model. Our technique extracts common slopes from ART using modal decomposition, retaining only the non-oscillating energy modes. Leveraging the structure of ART, changes to the positions of sound sources and listeners only require minimal processing. Experimental results show that even very few slopes are sufficient to capture the positional dependency of late reverberation, reducing model complexity substantially.