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Time Scale Modification
Time Scale Modification (TSM) means speeding up or slowing down
a sound without affecting the frequency content, such as the
perceived pitch of any tonal components. For example, TSM of speech
should sound like the speaker is talking at a slower or faster pace,
without distortion of the spoken vowels. Similarly, TSM of music
should change timing but not tuning.
When a recorded speech signal is simply played faster, such as by
lowering its sampling-rate and playing it at the original
sampling-rate, the pace of the speech increases as desired, but so
does the fundamental frequency (pitch contour). Moreover, the apparent
``head size'' of the speaker shrinks (the so-called
``munchkinization'' effect). This happens
because, as illustrated in §10.3, speech spectra have
formants (resonant peaks) which should not be moved when the
speech rate is varied. The average formant spacing in frequency is
a measure of the length of the vocal tract; hence, when speech
is simply played faster, the average formant spacing decreases,
corresponding to a smaller head size. This illusion of size
modulation can be a useful effect in itself, such as for scaling the
apparent size of virtual musical instruments using commuted synthesis
[47,266]. However, we also need to be able to adjust time
scales without this overall scaling effect.
The Fourier dual
of time-scale modification is frequency
scaling. In this case, we wish to scale the spectral content of a
signal up or down without altering the timing of sonic events in the
time domain. This effect is used, for example, to retune ``bad
notes'' in a recording studio. Frequency scaling can be implemented
as TSM preceded or followed by sampling-rate conversion, or it can be
implemented directly in a sequence of STFT frames like TSM.
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