For more than a decade it has been known, in a qualitative way, that the long‐time average power of a speech signal in an amplitude‐limited communications system can be increased materially by clipping the peaks of the speech wave and amplifying the remainder until the new peaks have the maximum allowable amplitude. This power increase can be computed from the statistical distribution for the instantaneous amplitudes of speech. Some of the available distributions have been collected and compared, and, upon their showing good agreement, one of them has been used for the computation. Simple formulas show that the power increase can be neither greater than the amount of clipping nor greater than the peak factor of speech. For 24 db of peak clipping, the power gain is about 12 db. The exact value depends upon the choice of peak factor for unclipped speech. In practice, the actual gain in signal‐to‐noise ratio on peak‐limited communications systems (e.g., AM and DSB radio) will be less than that computed here.
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January 1958
January 01 1958
On the Power Gained by Clipping Speech in the Audio Band
Weiant Wathen‐Dunn;
Weiant Wathen‐Dunn
Electronics Research Directorate, Air Force Cambridge Research Center, Bedford, Massachusetts
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David W. Lipke
David W. Lipke
Electronics Research Directorate, Air Force Cambridge Research Center, Bedford, Massachusetts
Search for other works by this author on:
Weiant Wathen‐Dunn
David W. Lipke
Electronics Research Directorate, Air Force Cambridge Research Center, Bedford, Massachusetts
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 30, 36–40 (1958)
Article history
Received:
August 05 1957
Citation
Weiant Wathen‐Dunn, David W. Lipke; On the Power Gained by Clipping Speech in the Audio Band. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 January 1958; 30 (1): 36–40. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1909372
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