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The MLT Sine Window
The modulated lapped transform (MLT) [160] uses the
sine window, defined by
![$\displaystyle w(n) = \sin\left[\left(n+\frac{1}{2}\right)\frac{\pi}{2M}\right], \quad n=0,1,2,\ldots,2M-1\,.$](img395.png) |
(4.24) |
The sine window is used in MPEG-1, Layer 3 (MP3 format), MPEG-2 AAC, and
MPEG-4 [200].
Properties:
Note that in perceptual audio coding systems, there is both an
analysis window and a synthesis window. That is, the
sine window is deployed twice, first when encoding the signal,
and second when decoding. As a result, the sine window is
squared in practical usage, rendering it equivalent to a Hann
window (
) in the final output signal (when there are no
spectral modifications).
It is of great practical value that the second window application
occurs after spectral modifications (such as spectral
quantization); any distortions due to spectral modifications are
tapered gracefully to zero by the synthesis window. Synthesis windows
were introduced at least as early as 1980
[213,49], and they became practical for
audio coding with the advent of time-domain aliasing cancellation
(TDAC) [214]. The TDAC technique made it possible
to use windows with 50% overlap without suffering a doubling of the
number of samples in the short-time Fourier transform. TDAC was
generalized to ``lapped orthogonal transforms'' (LOT) by Malvar
[160]. The modulated lapped transform (MLT) is a variant
of LOT used in conjunction with the modulated discrete cosine
transform (MDCT) [160]. See also [287] and
[291].
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