A graphical function W(r, c) has been determined experimentally, in which W is word articulation, r is the relative level of unclipped speech and the noise, and c is the amount of uniform, symmetrical, speech‐peak clipping. Preemphasis of the speech signal gave an approximately uniform speech spectrum prior to clipping. Uniform, random noise was mixed with the clipped speech before post‐equalization, making the final noise spectrum similar in shape to the speech spectrum. The real‐ear response of the earphones was compensated electrically to yield a uniform orthotelephonic response for the communication system, in the frequency range contributing significantly to articulation index. For constant clipping cn the function W(r, cn) approaches W(r, 0) as a limit for sufficiently large values of r. For . For the case of no clipping W(r) when transformed to W(A), A being articulation index, resembles closely the curve by Pollack.
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July 01 1949
Uniform Speech‐Peak Clipping in a Uniform Signal‐to‐Noise Spectrum Ratio
Daniel W. Martin
Daniel W. Martin
RCA Victor Division, Camden, New Jersey
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Daniel W. Martin
RCA Victor Division, Camden, New Jersey
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 21, 460 (1949)
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Daniel W. Martin; Uniform Speech‐Peak Clipping in a Uniform Signal‐to‐Noise Spectrum Ratio. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 July 1949; 21 (4_Supplement): 460. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1917075
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