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Any medium through which the music signal passes, whatever its form,
can be regarded as a filter. However, we do not usually think of
something as a filter unless it can modify the sound in some way. For
example, speaker wire is not considered a filter, but the speaker is
(unfortunately). The different vowel sounds in speech are produced
primarily by changing the shape of the mouth cavity, which changes the
resonances and hence the filtering characteristics of the vocal
tract. The tone control circuit in an ordinary car radio is a filter,
as are the bass, midrange, and treble boosts in a stereo
preamplifier. Graphic equalizers, reverberators, echo devices, phase
shifters, and speaker crossover networks are further examples of
useful filters in audio. There are also examples of undesirable
filtering, such as the uneven reinforcement of certain frequencies in
a room with ``bad acoustics.'' A well-known signal processing wizard
is said to have remarked, ``When you think about it, everything is a
filter.''
A digital filter is just a filter that operates on digital
signals, such as sound represented inside a computer. It is a
computation which takes one sequence of numbers (the input
signal) and produces a new sequence of numbers (the filtered output
signal). The filters mentioned in the previous paragraph are not
digital only because they operate on signals that are not digital. It
is important to realize that a digital filter can do anything that a
real-world filter can do. That is, all the filters alluded to above
can be simulated to an arbitrary degree of precision digitally. Thus,
a digital filter is only a formula for going from one digital signal
to another. It may exist as an equation on paper, as a small loop in a
computer subroutine, or as a handful of integrated circuit chips
properly interconnected.
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