Download Improved Reverberation Time Control for Feedback Delay Networks Artificial reverberation algorithms generally imitate the frequency-dependent decay of sound in a room quite inaccurately. Previous research suggests that a 5% error in the reverberation time (T60) can be audible. In this work, we propose to use an accurate graphic equalizer as the attenuation filter in a Feedback Delay Network reverberator. We use a modified octave graphic equalizer with a cascade structure and insert a high-shelf filter to control the gain at the high end of the audio range. One such equalizer is placed at the end of each delay line of the Feedback Delay Network. The gains of the equalizer are optimized using a new weighting function that acknowledges nonlinear error propagation from filter magnitude response to reverberation time values. Our experiments show that in real-world cases, the target T60 curve can be reproduced in a perceptually accurate manner at standard octave center frequencies. However, for an extreme test case in which the T60 varies dramatically between neighboring octave bands, the error still exceeds the limit of the just noticeable difference but is smaller than that obtained with previous methods. This work leads to more realistic artificial reverberation.
Download Flexible Real-Time Reverberation Synthesis With Accurate Parameter Control Reverberation is one of the most important effects used in audio
production. Although nowadays numerous real-time implementations of artificial reverberation algorithms are available, many of
them depend on a database of recorded or pre-synthesized room
impulse responses, which are convolved with the input signal. Implementations that use an algorithmic approach are more flexible
but do not let the users have full control over the produced sound,
allowing only a few selected parameters to be altered. The realtime implementation of an artificial reverberation synthesizer presented in this study introduces an audio plugin based on a feedback delay network (FDN), which lets the user have full and detailed insight into the produced reverb. It allows for control of
reverberation time in ten octave bands, simultaneously allowing
adjusting the feedback matrix type and delay-line lengths. The
proposed plugin explores various FDN setups, showing that the
lowest useful order for high-quality sound is 16, and that in the
case of a Householder matrix the implementation strongly affects
the resulting reverberation. Experimenting with delay lengths and
distribution demonstrates that choosing too wide or too narrow a
length range is disadvantageous to the synthesized sound quality.
The study also discusses CPU usage for different FDN orders and
plugin states.
Download Flutter Echo Modeling Flutter echo is a well-known acoustic phenomenon that occurs when sound waves bounce between two parallel reflective surfaces, creating a repetitive sound. In this work, we introduce a method to recreate flutter echo as an audio effect. The proposed algorithm is based on a feedback structure utilizing velvet noise that aims to synthesize the fluttery components of a reference room impulse response presenting flutter echo. Among these, the repetition time defines the length of the delay line in a feedback filter. The specific spectral properties of the flutter are obtained with a bandpass attenuation filter and a ripple filter, which enhances the harmonic behavior of the sound. Additional temporal shaping of a velvet-noise filter, which processes the output of the feedback loop, is performed based on the properties of the reference flutter. The comparison between synthetic and measured flutter echo impulse responses shows good agreement in terms of both the repetition time and reverberation time values.
Download Multichannel Interleaved Velvet Noise The cross-correlation of multichannel reverberation generated using interleaved velvet noise is studied. The interleaved velvetnoise reverberator was proposed recently for synthesizing the late reverb of an acoustic space. In addition to providing a computationally efficient structure and a perceptually smooth response, the interleaving method allows combining its independent branch outputs in different permutations, which are all equally smooth and flutter-free. For instance, a four-branch output can be combined in 4! or 24 ways. Additionally, each branch output set is mixed orthogonally, which increases the number of permutations from M ! to M 2 !, since sign inversions are taken along. Using specific matrices for this operation, which change the sign of velvet-noise sequences, decreases the correlation of some of the combinations. This paper shows that many selections of permutations offer a set of well decorrelated output channels, which produce a diffuse and colorless sound field, which is validated with spatial variation. The results of this work can be applied in the design of computationally efficient multichannel reverberators.
Download Differentiable Feedback Delay Network for Colorless Reverberation Artificial reverberation algorithms often suffer from spectral coloration, usually in the form of metallic ringing, which impairs the perceived quality of sound. This paper proposes a method to reduce the coloration in the feedback delay network (FDN), a popular artificial reverberation algorithm. An optimization framework is employed entailing a differentiable FDN to learn a set of parameters decreasing coloration. The optimization objective is to minimize the spectral loss to obtain a flat magnitude response, with an additional temporal loss term to control the sparseness of the impulse response. The objective evaluation of the method shows a favorable narrower distribution of modal excitation while retaining the impulse response density. The subjective evaluation demonstrates that the proposed method lowers perceptual coloration of late reverberation, and also shows that the suggested optimization improves sound quality for small FDN sizes. The method proposed in this work constitutes an improvement in the design of accurate and high-quality artificial reverberation, simultaneously offering computational savings.
Download RIR2FDN: An Improved Room Impulse Response Analysis and Synthesis This paper seeks to improve the state-of-the-art in delay-networkbased analysis-synthesis of measured room impulse responses (RIRs). We propose an informed method incorporating improved energy decay estimation and synthesis with an optimized feedback delay network. The performance of the presented method is compared against an end-to-end deep-learning approach. A formal listening test was conducted where participants assessed the similarity of reverberated material across seven distinct RIRs and three different sound sources. The results reveal that the performance of these methods is influenced by both the excitation sounds and the reverberation conditions. Nonetheless, the proposed method consistently demonstrates higher similarity ratings compared to the end-to-end approach across most conditions. However, achieving an indistinguishable synthesis of measured RIRs remains a persistent challenge, underscoring the complexity of this problem. Overall, this work helps improve the sound quality of analysis-based artificial reverberation.
Download Differentiable Active Acoustics - Optimizing Stability via Gradient Descent Active acoustics (AA) refers to an electroacoustic system that actively modifies the acoustics of a room. For common use cases, the number of transducers—loudspeakers and microphones—involved in the system is large, resulting in a large number of system parameters. To optimally blend the response of the system into the natural acoustics of the room, the parameters require careful tuning, which is a time-consuming process performed by an expert. In this paper, we present a differentiable AA framework, which allows multi-objective optimization without impairing architecture flexibility. The system is implemented in PyTorch to be easily translated into a machine-learning pipeline, thus automating the tuning process. The objective of the pipeline is to optimize the digital signal processor (DSP) component to evenly distribute the energy in the feedback loop across frequencies. We investigate the effectiveness of DSPs composed of finite impulse response filters, which are unconstrained during the optimization. We study the effect of multiple filter orders, number of transducers, and loss functions on the performance. Different loss functions behave similarly for systems with few transducers and low-order filters. Increasing the number of transducers and the order of the filters improves results and accentuates the difference in the performance of the loss functions.