AU5735990A

AU5735990A – Digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality
– Google Patents

AU5735990A – Digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality
– Google Patents
Digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality

Info

Publication number
AU5735990A

AU5735990A
AU57359/90A
AU5735990A
AU5735990A
AU 5735990 A
AU5735990 A
AU 5735990A
AU 57359/90 A
AU57359/90 A
AU 57359/90A
AU 5735990 A
AU5735990 A
AU 5735990A
AU 5735990 A
AU5735990 A
AU 5735990A
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
excitation signal
excitation
signal
candidate
determining
Prior art date
1989-06-23
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)

Granted

Application number
AU57359/90A
Other versions

AU638462B2
(en

Inventor
Ira Alan Gerson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Motorola Solutions Inc

Original Assignee
Motorola Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1989-06-23
Filing date
1990-05-02
Publication date
1991-02-22

1990-05-02
Application filed by Motorola Inc
filed
Critical
Motorola Inc

1991-02-22
Publication of AU5735990A
publication
Critical
patent/AU5735990A/en

1993-07-01
Application granted
granted
Critical

1993-07-01
Publication of AU638462B2
publication
Critical
patent/AU638462B2/en

2010-05-02
Anticipated expiration
legal-status
Critical

Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current

Links

Espacenet

Global Dossier

Discuss

Classifications

G—PHYSICS

G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS

G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING

G10L13/00—Speech synthesis; Text to speech systems

G—PHYSICS

G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS

G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING

G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis

G10L19/04—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis using predictive techniques

G10L19/08—Determination or coding of the excitation function; Determination or coding of the long-term prediction parameters

G10L19/12—Determination or coding of the excitation function; Determination or coding of the long-term prediction parameters the excitation function being a code excitation, e.g. in code excited linear prediction [CELP] vocoders

G—PHYSICS

G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS

G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING

G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis

G10L2019/0001—Codebooks

G10L2019/0004—Design or structure of the codebook

G10L2019/0005—Multi-stage vector quantisation

G—PHYSICS

G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS

G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING

G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis

G10L2019/0001—Codebooks

G10L2019/0011—Long term prediction filters, i.e. pitch estimation

G—PHYSICS

G10—MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS

G10L—SPEECH ANALYSIS OR SYNTHESIS; SPEECH RECOGNITION; SPEECH OR VOICE PROCESSING; SPEECH OR AUDIO CODING OR DECODING

G10L19/00—Speech or audio signals analysis-synthesis techniques for redundancy reduction, e.g. in vocoders; Coding or decoding of speech or audio signals, using source filter models or psychoacoustic analysis

G10L2019/0001—Codebooks

G10L2019/0013—Codebook search algorithms

Description

DIGITAL SPEECH CODER WITH VECTOR EXCITATION SOURCE HAVING IMPROVED SPEECH QUALITY
Technical Field
This invention relates generally to speech coders, and more particularly to digital speech coders that use vector excitation sources.
Background of the Invention
Speech coders are known in the art. Some speech coders convert analog voice samples into digitized representations, and subsequently represent the spectral speech information through use of linear predictive coding. Other speech coders improve upon ordinary linear predictive coding techniques by providing an excitation signal that is related to the original voice signal. I have described, in previously issued U.S. Patent No. 4,817,157, a digital speech coder having an improved vector excitation source wherein a codebook of excitation vectors is accessed to select an excitation signal that best fits the available information, and hence provides a recovered speech signal that closely represents the original.

In general, the resultant decoded speech signal will more closely represent the original unencoded speech signal if there is a significant number of candidate excitation vectors available for consideration as the excitation source. Increasing performance in this way, however, generally results in enlargement of the codebook size, and this will usually increase processing complexity and data rates.
A need therefore exists for a digital speech coder that uses a vector excitation signal, wherein for a given size codebook, the quality of the decoded speech signal is substantially maximized with minimal increase in complexity and substantially no increase in data rate.
Summary of the Invention
These needs and others are substantially met through provision of the digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality disclosed herein. Pursuant to this invention, when encoding a signal sample, such as a speech sample, the coder first determines a pitch period parameter for the speech sample. Relying in part upon this pitch period parameter, a particular coded excitation signal can be determined independent of the pitch filter coefficient, following which the pitch filter coefficient parameter can be optimized for that particular speech sample. This methodology allows candidate excitation signals to be considered without requiring a commensurate increase in processing complexity or data rates.
In one embodiment, the coded excitation signal is determined substantially independent from any pitch

information. In particular, candidate excitation signals as provided by a codebook are processed to substantially remove components that are representable, at least in part, by a reference component that is related, at least in part, to the intermediate pitch vector. More particularly, the vector component related to the intermediate pitch vector is removed from the candidate excitation signal (a process known as orthogonalizing). The orthogonalized candidate excitation signals are then compared with the unencoded speech sample to identify the candidate excitation signal that best represents this particular speech sample. The pitch information, including a pitch filter coefficient parameter, can be optimized later to best suit the selected excitation signal to thereby yield an overall optimized coded representation of the speech signal.
In another embodiment, a second codebook of candidate excitation signals, wherein two excitation signals are used to represent the speech sample, is provided. The first excitation signal can be selected as described above, and the second excitation signal can be selected in a similar manner, wherein candidate second excitation signals are first orthogonalized with respect to both the intermediate pitch vector and the previously selected first excitation signal.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Fig. 1 comprises a block diagrammatic depiction of the invention; and
Fig. 2 comprises a simple vector diagram representing one aspect of the invention.

Best Mode For Carrying Out The Invention:
This invention can be embodied in a speech coder that makes use of an appropriate digital signal processor such as a Motorola DSP 56000 family device. The computational functions of such a DSP embodiment are represented in Fig. 1 as a block diagram equivalent circuit. A pitch period parameter (101 ) (determined in accordance with prior art technique) is provided to a pitch filter state (102) that comprises part of a pitch filter. The resultant signal (103) comprises an intermediate pitch vector that is provided to both a first multiplier (104) and two orthogonalizing processes (106 and 107) as described below in more detail. This first multiplier (104) functions to multiply the resultant signal by a pitch filter coefficient (108) to yield a pitch filter output (109). Selection of the pitch filter coefficient (108) will be described below in more detail. A first codebook (111) includes a set of basis vectors that can be linearly combined to form a plurality of resultant excitation signals. Depending upon the size of the memory utilized, and other factors appropriate to the application, the number of possible resultant excitation signals can be, for example, between 64 and 2,048, with more of course being possible when appropriate to a particular application. The problem, when encoding a particular speech sample, is to select whichever of these excitation sources best represents the corresponding component of the original speech information.

Pursuant to this invention, once a particular resultant signal (103) has been determined, the excitation signals formulated by the first codebook (111 ) will be presented in seriatim fashion as candidate excitation sources. Each candidate excitation source will first be orthogonalized (106) with respect to the resultant signal. For example, referring momentarily to Fig. 2, if vector A were considered to represent the resultant signal and vector B were to represent a particular candidate excitation source, orthogonalization of the candidate excitation source signal would result in the vector denoted by reference character B’. (It should be understood that in practice, the vector dimension space is a function of the number of samples comprising the vectors, which may be upwards of 40 samples or more. It should also be noted that the candidate excitation vectors may be readily orthogonalized by orthogonalizing the basis vectors, wherein linear combinations of the orthogonadized basis vectors with one another will result in orthogonalized excitation vectors.)
Once orthogonalized, the resulting candidate excitation source can be compared (112) with the unencoded signal (113) (or an appropriate representative signal based thereon) to determine the relative similarity or disparity between the two. The process is then repeated for each of the excitation sources of the first codebook (111 ). A determination can then be made as to which candidate excitation source most closely aligns with the unencoded signal (113).
In this p articular embodiment, a gain factor (1 14) can also be used to modify each candidate excitation

source signal, as well understood in the art. In addition, if desired, the excitation source selection and gain compensation can both be accomplished in a substantially simultaneous manner, as also well understood in the art.
Once an appropriate excitation source from the first codebook (111 ) has been selected through this process, the orthogonalizing process (106) can thereafter be dispensed with and the exact excitation source signal selected (116) through an appropriate control mechanism (117). Thereafter, presuming a single codebook coder, the pitch information can be gated (117) and summed (118) together with the selected excitation source with the pitch filter coefficient (108) and excitation gain (114) optimized such that the combined excitation most closely aligns with the encoded signal (113). Once optimized, the pitch period parameter, pitch filter coefficient, and particular excitation source and gain are known, and appropriate representations thereof may be utilized thereafter as representative of the original speech sample.
If desired, and as depicted in Fig. 1 , an additional codebook (121) can be utilized, which second codebook (121) again includes a plurality of basis vector derived candidate excitation sources. The use of such multiple codebooks is understood in the art. Pursuant to this invention, however, once the first excitation source from the first codebook (111) has been selected as described above, the candidate excitation sources from the second codebook (121) are orthogonalized (107) with respect to both the resultant signal (103) and the selected excitation source signal from the first

codebook (111 ). The selection process can then continue as described above, with the orthogonalized candidate excitation source signals from the second codebook (121 ) being compared against a representative unencoded signal (113) to identify the closest fit. Once this excitation source has been selected, the pitch filter coefficient (108) and excitation gains (114 and 120) can then be optimized as described above. What is claimed is:

Claims (11)

Claims

1 . A method of encoding a speech sample, comprising the steps of: A) determining a pitch period parameter for the speech sample characterized by;
B) determining, independent of any pitch filter coefficient, a coded excitation signal for the speech sample; C) optimizing at least a pitch filter coefficient parameter for the speech sample.

2. The method of claim 1 further characterized in that the step of determining a coded excitation signal includes providing a plurality of candidate excitation signals.

3. The method of claim 2 further characterized in that the step of determining a coded excitation signal includes processing the plurality of candidate excitation signals to render processed candidate excitation signals that are comprised of information that is substantially independent of information that is representable by a pitch filter output that is derived, at least in part, as a function of the pitch period parameter.

4. The method of claim 2 further characterized in that the step of determining a coded excitation signal includes processing the plurality of candidate excitation signals to orthogonalize the plurality of candidate excitation signals with respect to a pitch filter output that is derived, at least in part, as a function of the pitch period parameter.

5. The method of claim 1 , further characterized in that the step of determining the coded excitation signal comprises the steps of:
B1) processing an excitation signal to substantially remove components that are representable, at least in part, by a reference that is related, at least in part, to the pitch period parameter; and
B2) determining an appropriate excitation signal for the speech sample.

6. A method of claim 5 further characterized in that the step of processing the excitation signal includes processing the excitation signal to orthogonalize the excitation signal with respect to a pitch filter output that is derived, at least in part, as a function of the pitch period parameter.

7. The method of claim 5, and further characterized by the step of: C1 ) processing a candidate excitation signal to substantially remove components that are representable at least in part, by: a reference that is related, at least in part, to the pitch period parameter; and the appropriate excitation signal determined in step C.

8. The method of claim 7 further characterized in that the step of processing a candidate excitation signal includes processing the candidate excitation signal to orthogonalize the candidate excitation signal with respect to both the reference and the appropriate excitation signal determined in step C.

9. A method of encoding a signal sample using at least two codebooks that include information regarding candidate excitation signals, comprising the steps of: A) determining, using a first one of the codebooks, a first excitation signal for the signal sample; characterized by:
B) determining, using a second one of the codebooks, a second excitation signal for the signal sample, which second excitation signal is comprised of information that is substantially independent of information that is representable by the first excitation signal;
C) using the first and second excitation signals to represent, at least in part, the signal sample.

10. The method of claim 9 further characterized in that the signal sample comprises a speech sample.

1 1 . The method of claim 9 further characterized in that the step of determining the second excitation signal includes processing a candidate excitation signal to orthogonalize the candidate excitation signal with respect to the first excitation signal.

AU57359/90A
1989-06-23
1990-05-02
Digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality

Expired

AU638462B2
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

US37054189A

1989-06-23
1989-06-23

US370541

1989-06-23

Publications (2)

Publication Number
Publication Date

AU5735990A
true

AU5735990A
(en)

1991-02-22

AU638462B2

AU638462B2
(en)

1993-07-01

Family
ID=23460115
Family Applications (1)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

AU57359/90A
Expired

AU638462B2
(en)

1989-06-23
1990-05-02
Digital speech coder with vector excitation source having improved speech quality

Country Status (10)

Country
Link

EP
(1)

EP0484339B1
(en)

KR
(1)

KR950003557B1
(en)

CN
(1)

CN1023160C
(en)

AU
(1)

AU638462B2
(en)

BR
(1)

BR9007467A
(en)

CA
(1)

CA2060310C
(en)

DE
(1)

DE69032026T2
(en)

IL
(1)

IL94119A
(en)

NZ
(1)

NZ234180A
(en)

WO
(1)

WO1991001545A1
(en)

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

JPH0451199A
(en)

*

1990-06-18
1992-02-19
Fujitsu Ltd
Sound encoding/decoding system

JPH0451200A
(en)

*

1990-06-18
1992-02-19
Fujitsu Ltd
Sound encoding system

IT1241358B
(en)

*

1990-12-20
1994-01-10
Sip

VOICE SIGNAL CODING SYSTEM WITH NESTED SUBCODE

JP2776050B2
(en)

*

1991-02-26
1998-07-16
日本電気株式会社

Audio coding method

DE4315315A1
(en)

*

1993-05-07
1994-11-10
Ant Nachrichtentech

Method for vector quantization, especially of speech signals

SG43128A1
(en)

*

1993-06-10
1997-10-17
Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd
Code excitation linear predictive (celp) encoder and decoder

JP3224955B2
(en)

*

1994-05-27
2001-11-05
株式会社東芝

Vector quantization apparatus and vector quantization method

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

CA1252568A
(en)

*

1984-12-24
1989-04-11
Kazunori Ozawa
Low bit-rate pattern encoding and decoding capable of reducing an information transmission rate

US4868867A
(en)

*

1987-04-06
1989-09-19
Voicecraft Inc.
Vector excitation speech or audio coder for transmission or storage

US4899385A
(en)

*

1987-06-26
1990-02-06
American Telephone And Telegraph Company
Code excited linear predictive vocoder

1990

1990-04-18
IL
IL9411990A
patent/IL94119A/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1990-05-02
AU
AU57359/90A
patent/AU638462B2/en
not_active
Expired

1990-05-02
EP
EP90908908A
patent/EP0484339B1/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1990-05-02
KR
KR1019910701947A
patent/KR950003557B1/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1990-05-02
BR
BR909007467A
patent/BR9007467A/en
not_active
IP Right Cessation

1990-05-02
CA
CA002060310A
patent/CA2060310C/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1990-05-02
WO
PCT/US1990/002469
patent/WO1991001545A1/en
active
IP Right Grant

1990-05-02
DE
DE69032026T
patent/DE69032026T2/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1990-06-19
CN
CN90103020A
patent/CN1023160C/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1990-06-21
NZ
NZ234180A
patent/NZ234180A/en
unknown

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

KR950003557B1
(en)

1995-04-14

DE69032026T2
(en)

1998-09-17

CN1023160C
(en)

1993-12-15

DE69032026D1
(en)

1998-03-12

CN1048278A
(en)

1991-01-02

IL94119A0
(en)

1991-01-31

CA2060310C
(en)

2001-07-17

EP0484339A1
(en)

1992-05-13

AU638462B2
(en)

1993-07-01

BR9007467A
(en)

1992-06-16

NZ234180A
(en)

1993-11-25

CA2060310A1
(en)

1990-12-24

KR920702787A
(en)

1992-10-06

IL94119A
(en)

1996-06-18

WO1991001545A1
(en)

1991-02-07

EP0484339A4
(en)

1993-05-05

EP0484339B1
(en)

1998-02-04

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