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When the amplitude envelope, frequency, phase, and onset time are all
accurately estimated (for all time), it is possible to subtract
the synthesized modal impulse response from the measured impulse
response. (This contrasts with purely spectral modal parameters which
are amplitude, frequency, bandwidth, and phase.) This method of
``sinusoidal track removal'' is used in sines-plus-noise spectral
modeling. (See [428] for further details and supporting C
software). In this approach, the resonant mode is subtracted out of
the impulse response (or complex frequency response) rather than being
divided out of the frequency response (or deconvolved out of the
impulse response).
There are some disadvantages of subtraction relative to inverse
filtering. First, more parameters must be accurately measured; the
precise gain and phase of the resonance are needed in addition to its
frequency and bandwidth. Inverse filtering on the other hand requires
only estimation of frequency and bandwidth (or frequency and
time-constant of decay). In addition, the residual impulse response
after subtraction cannot be precisely commuted with the string for
commuted synthesis.
The advantages of subtraction over inverse filtering are that
amplitude modulation due to mode coupling can be retained in the
measured modal decay and subtracted out, whereas a second-order
inverse filter cannot subtract out the modulation due to
coupling. Also, if the system is time varying (as happens, for
example, when the performer's hand is pressing against the resonating
body in a time-varying way), the subtraction method can potentially
track the changing modal parameters and still successfully remove the
modal decay. To compete with this, the inverse filtering method would
have to support a time-varying filter model. As another example, if
the guitar body is moving, the measured response is a time-varying
linear combination of fixed resonant modes (although some Doppler
shift is possible). The subtraction method can follow a time-varying
gain (and phase) so that the subtraction still will take out the mode.
The inverse filtering method seems most natural when the physical
resonator is time-invariant and is well modeled as a series of
resonant sections. It is also the only one strictly valid for use in
commuted synthesis. The subtraction method seems most natural when
the physical resonator is best modeled as a sum of resonating
modes. As a compromise between the two approaches, all parametric
modes may be separated from the nonparametric modes by means of
inverse filtering, and the parametric part can then be split into
parallel form.
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