Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Tim Hurley.  Spectrograms are used to identify and analyze sounds  Typically, x-axis represents time and y- axis represents frequency  Spectrograms.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Tim Hurley.  Spectrograms are used to identify and analyze sounds  Typically, x-axis represents time and y- axis represents frequency  Spectrograms."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tim Hurley

2  Spectrograms are used to identify and analyze sounds  Typically, x-axis represents time and y- axis represents frequency  Spectrograms are used to visually represent a Discrete Fourier Transform

3

4  First way: Filters The filter takes frequencies and passes them through and rejects frequencies that are outside of the given range

5  We already did that!! Nooooo, we found something different.  Waves are continuous sinusoidal functions. Finding the Fourier coefficients for these produced an infinite series numbers Computers don’t like infinite numbers

6  Recall that we wanted to find Fourier coefficients in order to find an approximation for the square wave We took the integral from 0 to 2π and looked at different cases and found the form for a n and b n. This produced infinite number of values

7  I started with a similar equation and took the summation of it from 0 to N-1 N = number of samples within a given window  Difficulties arose because I had to use multiple trig identities in order to re-write the sums/products of sinusoids so they were able to be manipulated.  After tedious trig work I was able to determine the form of the coefficients

8  Good question!  Discrete Fourier Transform looks at a small windows of a sound signal. Breaks this window into N small fractions of seconds (ex: 0.0005 secs) Determines the discrete Fourier coefficients for this section Coefficients represent intensities of different frequencies of the wave These numbers are graphed and the process is repeated

9 Blue = higher intensity frequency Red = medium intensity frequency Yellow = low intensity frequency This will happen for every ‘window’ until entire sound is analyzed and graphed

10 “Philip–” “–s” “re–” “–e–” “–sear–” “–ch” www.seeingwithsound.com/javoice.htm

11 Questions?? By the way, this is my last assignment as an undergrad student


Download ppt "Tim Hurley.  Spectrograms are used to identify and analyze sounds  Typically, x-axis represents time and y- axis represents frequency  Spectrograms."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google