Data repository for the trajectoRIR database: room acoustic recordings along a trajectory of moving microphones
Authors/Creators
Description
Data availability is essential to develop acoustic signal processing algorithms, especially when it comes to data-driven approaches that demand large and diverse training datasets. For this reason, an increasing number of databases have been published in recent years, including either room impulse responses (RIRs) or audio recordings during motion. In this paper we introduce the trajectoRIR database, an extensive, multi-array collection of both dynamic and stationary acoustic recordings along a controlled trajectory in a room. Specifically, the database features recordings using moving microphones and stationary RIRs spatially sampling the room acoustics along an L-shaped trajectory. This combination makes trajectoRIR unique and applicable in various tasks ranging from sound source localization and tracking to spatially dynamic sound field reconstruction, auralization and system identification. The recording room has a reverberation time of 0.5s, and the three different microphone configurations employed include a dummy head, with additional reference microphones located next to the ears, 3 first-order Ambisonics microphones, two circular arrays of 16 and 4 channels, and a 12-channel linear array. The motion of the microphones was achieved using a robotic cart traversing a 4.62m-long rail at three speeds: [0.2, 0.4, 0.8] m/s. Audio signals were reproduced using two stationary loudspeakers. The collected database features 8648 stationary RIRs, as well as perfect sweeps, speech, music, and stationary noise recorded during motion. Python functions are included to access the recorded audio as well as to retrieve geometrical information.
For a detailed description, please refer to the paper: preprint
Publication
If you use this database, please cite the following paper:
S. Damiano, K. MacWilliam, V. Lorenzoni,. T. Dietzen and T. van Waterschoot, "The trajectoRIR Database: Room Acoustic Recordings Along a Trajectory of Moving Microphones,” arXiv:2503.23004, 2025. DOI: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2503.23004
Files
trajectoRIR.zip
Files
(6.0 GB)
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md5:91f70df90ae4fe88702637f260c92078
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Additional details
Funding
- European Commission
- SONORA - The Spatial Dynamics of Room Acoustics 773268
- European Commission
- SOUNDS - Service-Oriented Ubiquitous Network-Driven Sound 956369
- European Commission
- I-SPOT - Intelligent Ultra Low-Power Signal Processing for Automotive 956962
- Research Foundation - Flanders
- The Boundary Element Method as a State-Space Realization Problem G0A0424N
- Research Foundation - Flanders
- New Perspectives on Medieval and Renaissance Courtly Song S005525N
- KU Leuven
- HELIXON: Hybride, efficiënte en vloeiende interpolatie van geluid in uitgebreide realiteit C3/23/056
- KU Leuven
- A holistic approach to the design of integrated and distributed digital signal processing algorithms for audio and speech communication devices C14/21/075
- Flemish Government
- AI Research Program