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Magnitude-only Analysis/Synthesis
A traditional result of sound perception is that the ear is sensitive
principally to the short-time spectral magnitude and not to the
phase, provided phase continuity is maintained. Our experience has
been that this may or may not be true depending on the application,
and in §11 we will discuss it. Obviously if the phase
information is discarded, the analysis, the modification, and the
resynthesis processes are simplified enormously. Thus we will use
the magnitude-only option of the program whenever the application
allows it.
In the peak detection process we calculate the magnitude and phase of
each peak by using the complex spectrum. Once we decide to discard
the phase information there is no need for complex spectra and we
simply can calculate the magnitude of the peak by doing the parabolic
interpolation directly on the log magnitude spectrum.
The synthesis also becomes easier; there is no need for a cubic
function to interpolate the instantaneous phase. The phase will be a
function of the instantaneous frequency and the only condition is
phase continuity at the frame boundaries. Therefore, the frequency can
be linearly interpolated from frame to frame, like the amplitude.
Without phase matching the synthesized waveform will look very
different from the original (Fig. 7), but the sound quality for
many applications will be perceptually the same.
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Download parshl.pdf