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Digital Sound and Video Chapter 10, Exploring the Digital Domain.

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Presentation on theme: "Digital Sound and Video Chapter 10, Exploring the Digital Domain."— Presentation transcript:

1 Digital Sound and Video Chapter 10, Exploring the Digital Domain

2 Digital Sampling of Sound Digital sound is sound that has been converted to, or created in, a discrete form (namely a set of numeric values) Natural sound is a continuous phenomena and is converted to digital form by sampling techniques Properties of sound waves amplitude (measure of loudness) frequency (measure of pitch)

3 Continuous Sound Wave

4 Sampling Sound Temporal sampling sample rate resolution Analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) Digital-to-analog converters (DACs)

5 Sampling of a Sound Wave Illustrated

6 Sampling of a Sound Wave Illustrated (cont’d)

7

8 Resolution and Dynamic Range Resolution depends on how much memory is devoted to storing individual sample amplitudes 8-bit sound 16-bit sound Dynamic range and clipping

9 Resolution Illustrated

10 Storing Digital Sound Sample rate and resolution -- tradeoffs Voice and speech: 8-bit resolution and 5-10 KHz sample rate CD-quality music: 16-bit or higher resolution and 44 KHz Nyquist’s “Theorem” and aliasing Audio file compression Sound on the Web -- streaming audio

11 Synthesizing Music Uses simple waveforms and oscillators to “build” more complex sound waves Various techniques are employed to do this “build” Subtractive synthesis Additive synthesis FM synthesis Phase distortion synthesis Integrated synthesis Impose an ADSR (attack, decay, sustain, release) envelope to simulate instruments

12 Oscillators

13 ADSR Envelope

14 MIDI Instruments and Devices MIDI is a standard interface between electronic musical instruments and synthesizers Devices which are MIDI-compatible can communicate with each other Advantages to MIDI files are encoded and are much smaller than digitized sound files files can be easily edited and mixed for multiple tracks

15 Speech Synthesis Speech synthesis involves creating speech from written text (or other encodings) Two approaches Store digitized recordings of words Analysis of written text focuses on breaking the text into phonemes

16 Digitized Word Approach Parser separates text into words Uses a binary search tree to look up words Similar to a spelling dictionary – instead an enunciation dictionary Advantage is very realistic sound Disadvantage is lack of speed Works well if the number of words are limited Grocery checkout Alert systems Not very useful for real-time “reading” where the words in the text is not know in advance

17 Rule-Based Phoneme Approach Analysis of written text focuses on breaking the text into phonemes rather than words Text is parsed for phonemes Phonemes are identified Enunciation is looked up in a small indexed file English employs approximately 50 basic phonemes

18 Phoneme Approach (cont’d) Rules allow a speech synthesis program to evaluate alternate pronunciations of phonemes appropriate for the context Such rule-based phoneme analysis produces excellent speech synthesis results

19 Speech Recognition Speech recognition attempts to interpret digitized speech for meaning The task is complicated by the differences among speakers and even the different ways a given speaker might pronounce the same word depending on mood, context, etc.

20 Speech Recognition: Illustrating the Difficulties

21 Speech Recognition (cont’d) Some success has been achieved by tailoring/training a program to recognize a particular speaker Some reasonably successful voice activation systems have been produced where vocabulary is limited to small number of words Speech recognition remains a very challenging problem

22 Editing Digitized Sound Digital sound editing is part of a larger field called digital signal processing Once sound is digitized, it is in discrete numerical format Numerical transformations on this data can be used to: change the sound’s pitch change the sound’s amplitude add echoes and other special effects

23 Summary -- Sound Digital sound is produced by sampling sound waves over time A digital sound file consists of sampled amplitudes at a number of discrete times within a given time interval The number of samples per second is called the sample rate The number of bits devoted to storing individual sampled amplitudes is called the resolution of the digitized sound: 8-bit, 16-bit and higher resolutions are used depending on the kind of sound being digitized Fidelity will be largely determined by the sample rate and resolution

24 Producing Digital Video Video capture Editing Playback

25 Digital Video The Process Illustrated

26 Digital Video: Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Scalable to different playback systems Random access to frames Nonlinear editing More playback options Potential for interactivity Disadvantages Special hardware/software needed for production High playback and storage requirements

27 Compression: Coping with Large Files Compression is an encoding process that filters the original file in several successive stages

28 Other Methods for Reducing Demands Frame rate adjustment adjusts for with slower CPUs helps keep video and audio synchronized Lower resolution on individual frames sometimes used in conjunction with smaller display window

29 The Desktop Video System Basic Components Analog Source Video Capture Card CPU Secondary Storage Monitor Edit and Playback Control

30 Editing Digital Video Clip Logging Assembling Transitions dissolves wipes, etc. Rotoscoping Compositing keying titling

31 Summary --Video Digital video is: scalable allows nonlinear editing has interactive potential Digital video can be produced with desktop systems Flexible editing and playback options are major advantages Storage requirement is biggest disadvantage


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