Active Noise Cancellation Device
20190122650 ยท 2019-04-25
Inventors
- Victor Dzhigan (Moscow, RU)
- Alexey Petrovsky (Moscow, RU)
- JingFan Qin (Shenzhen, CN)
- Yang Song (Shenzhen, CN)
Cpc classification
G10K11/17881
PHYSICS
G10K11/17833
PHYSICS
G10K2210/30231
PHYSICS
G10K2210/3028
PHYSICS
G10K11/17815
PHYSICS
G10K2210/1081
PHYSICS
G10K11/17817
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An active noise cancellation device includes a first input for receiving a microphone signal from the microphone, a first electrical compensation path and a second electrical compensation path being coupled in parallel between a first node and the first input to provide a first noise canceling signal for a feed-backward prediction of a noise source, a third electrical compensation path and a fourth electrical compensation path being coupled in parallel between a second node and the first input to provide a second noise canceling signal for a feed-forward prediction of the noise source.
Claims
1. An active noise cancellation device comprising: a microphone; a first input coupled to the microphone, the first input configured to receive a microphone signal from the microphone; a canceling loudspeaker; a first output coupled to the canceling loudspeaker, the first output configured to provide a first noise canceling signal to the canceling loudspeaker; a first node configured to provide a prediction of a noise source; a first electrical compensation path; and a second electrical compensation path, the first electrical compensation path and the second electrical compensation path being coupled in parallel between the first input and the first node to generate the first noise canceling signal.
2. The active noise cancellation device of claim 1, further comprising a subtraction unit, the subtraction unit coupling the first electrical compensation path and the second electrical compensation path to the first input.
3. The active noise cancellation device of claim , further comprising: a second output coupled to the canceling loudspeaker and configured to provide a second noise canceling signal to the canceling loudspeaker; a second node configured to provide a feed-forward (FE) prediction of the noise source; a third electrical compensation path; and a fourth electrical compensation path, the third electrical compensation path and the fourth electrical compensation path being coupled in parallel between the first input and the second node, and the first node being further configured to provide a feed-backward (FB) prediction of the noise source.
4. The active noise cancellation device of claim 3, further comprising a subtraction unit, the subtraction unit coupling the third electrical compensation path and the fourth electrical compensation path to the first input.
5. The active noise cancellation device of claim 3, further comprising a delay element positioned between the first input and the first node and configured to provide the FB prediction.
6. The active noise cancellation device of claim 5, further comprising: a second input coupled to at least one of the first output and the second output and configured to receive a far-end speaker signal; a first adaptation circuit comprising an error input; a first reproduction filter positioned between a third input and the error input and configured to reproduce a first electrical estimate of a secondary acoustic path; and a second reproduction filter positioned between the first output and the first input and configured to reproduce a second electrical estimate of the secondary acoustic path.
7. The active noise cancellation device of claim 6, further comprising: a subtraction unit configured to subtract either a first reproduction filter output from the microphone signal or a third subtraction unit output to provide an error signal to the first adaptation circuit and a second adaptation circuit; a second subtraction unit configured to subtract either a second reproduction filter output from the microphone signal or the third subtraction unit output to provide a compensation signal to the delay element; and a third output configured to output the compensation signal as far-end speech with noise.
8. The active noise cancellation device of claim 3, wherein the third electrical compensation path comprises a first reproduction filter cascaded with an adaptive filter, the first reproduction filter being configured to reproduce an electrical estimate of a secondary acoustic path.
9. The active noise cancellation device of claim 8, wherein the fourth electrical compensation path comprises a replica of the adaptive filter cascaded with a second reproduction filter, the second reproduction filter being configured to reproduce the electrical estimate.
10. The active noise cancellation device of claim 9, further comprising a tap coupled to the second output and positioned between the replica, of the adaptive filter and the second reproduction filter.
11. The active noise cancellation device of claim 8, further comprising a first adaptation circuit configured to adjust first filter weights of a first adaptive filter, the first reproduction filter being cascaded with the first adaptation circuit.
12. The active noise cancellation device of claim 11, further comprising a second adaptation circuit configured to adjust second filter weights of a second adaptive filter, the first reproduction filter being cascaded with the second adaptation circuit.
13. The active noise cancellation device of claim wherein the first electrical compensation path comprises a first reproduction filter cascaded with a first adaptive filter, and the first reproduction filter being configured to reproduce a first electrical estimate of a secondary acoustic path.
14. The active noise cancellation device of claim 13, wherein the second electrical compensation path comprises a replica of the first adaptive filter cascaded with a second reproduction filter, the second electrical compensation path being configured to reproduce the first electrical estimate.
15. The active noise cancellation device of claim 14, further comprising a first tap coupled to the first output and positioned between the replica and the second reproduction filter.
16. The active noise cancellation device of claim 1, wherein the first input is configured to receive an error signal from the microphone.
17. The active noise cancellation device of claim 1, wherein the canceling loudspeaker is acoustically coupled to the microphone.
18. The active noise cancellation device of claim 1, wherein the first node is coupled to the first and the second electrical compensation paths.
19. The active noise cancellation device of claim 6, wherein the first adaptation circuit is coupled to the adaptive filter of the first electrical compensation path and a replica of the adaptive filter of the second electrical compensation path.
20. The active noise cancellation device of claim 19, wherein the first adaptation circuit is configured to provide a same filter weight to an adaptive filter and the replica of the adaptive filter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0055] Further embodiments of the disclosure will be described with respect to the following figures, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0085] In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part thereof, and in which is shown by way of illustration specific aspects in which the disclosure may be practiced. It is understood that other aspects may be utilized and structural or logical changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. The following detailed description, therefore, is not to be taken in a limiting sense, and the scope of the present disclosure is defined by the appended claims.
[0086] It is understood that comments made in connection with a described method may also hold true for a corresponding device or system configured to perform the method and vice versa. For example, if a specific method step is described, a corresponding device may include a unit to perform the described method step, even if such unit is not explicitly described or illustrated in the figures. Further, it is understood that the features of the various exemplary aspects described herein may be combined with each other, unless specifically noted otherwise.
[0087] The devices, methods and systems according to the disclosure are based on one or more of the following techniques that are described in the following: FF ANC, FB Active Noise Control and Hybrid Active Noise Control.
[0088] Presently there are 3 main kinds of ANC systems: FF, FB and Hybrid (the combination of FF and FB).
[0089] The FF ANC system 20, see
[0090] The noise 22, received by the reference microphone 21, is x.sub.1(k). In the description, the lower index 1 indicates the signals, related to the FF ANC system architectures. Noise x(k), propagated via acoustic media, called primary path 101, to a location, where the noise has to be cancelled, produces the noise h.sub.N.sub.
h.sub.N.sub.
is the vector of the primary path 101 impulse response samples, i.e. discrete model of the impulse response;
x.sub.N.sub.
is the vector of the input signal of discrete filter h.sub.N.sub.
[0091] Error microphone 103 receives the combination of the above noise h.sub.N.sub.
h.sub.N.sub.
is the vector of the secondary path 105 impulse response samples, i.e., the discrete model of the impulse response;
y.sub.N.sub.
is signal vector of the discrete filter h.sub.N.sub.
[0092] The cancelled noise, received by error microphone 103, is
a.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
[0093] Signals x.sub.1(k) and a.sub.1(k) are used by the FF ANC system 20 to generate the anti-noise, eliminated by the loudspeaker 107. Secondary path 105 filter is generally a convolution of the DAC, amplifier, loudspeaker 107 and secondary path acoustic impulse responses. The anti-noise is produced by the Adaptive Feed-forward ANC 28.
[0094] The FB ANC system 30, see
[0095] The signal 106, y.sub.2(k), is eliminated via a loudspeaker 107 and propagated via the secondary path 105. In cancellation plane (i.e. location of error microphone) the signal produces the anti-noise h.sub.N.sub.
y.sub.N.sub.
[0096] The anti-noise is produced by the Adaptive Feed-backward ANC 38.
[0097] The Hybrid ANC system 40, see
[0098] The FF, FB and Hybrid ANC systems use the adaptive filters 28, 38 for cancelled noise estimation and anti-noise generation. The anti-noise is produced by a combination of the Adaptive Feed-Backward ANC 38 and the Adaptive Feed-Forward ANC 28 which output signals 106, 206 are added by an addition unit 42 and provided to the cancelling loudspeaker 107.
[0099] In the following description and visualization in the figures, for the adaptive filters the filtering part, called Adaptive Filter, and the Adaptive Algorithm, which calculates the Adaptive Filter weights, are separated for a better representation. It is because some of the ANC architectures use two filters (Adaptive Filter and Adaptive Filter Copy) with the same weights, computed by the Adaptive Algorithm, but with different input signals.
[0100] Hereinafter, the filters of the primary h.sub.N.sub.
[0101] The details of the FF ANC system 20, see
[0102] To get a perfect cancellation of the noise
d(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
produced by the signal of the noise source x(k) 102, the signal z.sub.1(k) in the plane of reference microphone has to satisfy the conditions
z.sub.1(k)d(k) (8)
[0103] Signal z.sub.1(k) is the result of the filtering of the signal x(k)=x.sub.1(k) by a filter with the weights, that are the convolution of h.sub.N.sub.1(k1) and h.sub.N.sub.
[0104] An adaptive filter consists of the filtering part 323, that performs the operation h.sub.N.sub.
[0105] In the case, the input signal vector of the total filter consists of the signal vectors of the both filters. That is, the signal vector that is used in the Adaptive Algorithm, has to be extended with a vector
x.sub.N.sub.
[0106] However, as N.sub.S is not known exactly, the vector
x.sub.N.sub.
is used instead of (9).
[0107] The vector h.sub.N.sub.
[0108] In the FF ANC architecture 50, see
z.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
[0109] The error signal, received by the error microphone,
a.sub.1(k)=d(k)+n(k)z.sub.1(k) (12)
also contains the additive noise n(k), that is uncorrelated with primary noise x(k). The noise n(k) can include uncorrelated acoustic noise in the FF ANC system and other uncorrelated noise that is produced by the DAC and loudspeaker amplifier in secondary path 105, and by the amplifier and ADC in error microphone branch in any of FF, FB and Hybrid ANC systems.
[0110] For Adaptive Filter weights calculation the architecture of the FF ANC system 50, see
[0111] Due to the using of the filter h.sub.N.sub.
where .sub.x.sup.2 is the variance of the signal x(k).
[0112] The details of the FB ANC system 60, see
u.sub.2(k)=a.sub.2(k)[z.sub.2(k)]=d(k)+n(k)z.sub.2(k)+z.sub.2(k)d(k)+n(k), (14)
where
z.sub.2(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
is the estimate of anti-noise signal z.sub.2(k) and
y.sub.N.sub.
[0113] The signal z.sub.2(k) in the plane of reference microphone has to satisfy the conditions z.sub.2(k)d(k). Signal z.sub.2(k) is the result of the filtering of the signal x.sub.2(k) by a filter with the weights, that are the convolution of h.sub.N.sub.
[0114] The FB ANC system input signal is the one-sample delayed signal
x.sub.2(k)=u.sub.2(k1) (17)
[0115] A maximal step-size .sub.max of the gradient search based Adaptive Algorithms, used in the FB ANC system 60, see
[0116] The details of Hybrid, i.e. combined FF and FB, ANC system 70, see
[0117] In the Hybrid ANC architecture, the anti-noise signal is produced as
z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
where
y.sub.N.sub.
[0118] The signal z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k) is produced as
z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
where
y.sub.N.sub.
[0119] A maximal step-size .sub.max of the each of the two gradient search based Adaptive Algorithms 131, 231, used in the Hybrid ANC system 70, is defined in the same way as equation (13), where the numbers of Adaptive Filter weights are N.sub.1=N.sub.2.
[0120] Both Adaptive Filters 123, 323, used in used the Hybrid ANC system, can be viewed as a 2-channel adaptive filter.
[0121] The disclosure is based on the finding that techniques for improving active noise cancellation according to the disclosure solve the following three problems, which restrict the efficiency of ANC systems and its applications.
[0122] Problem 1: The step-size .sub.max, see equation (13), in gradient search based Adaptive Algorithms, used in the FF, FB and Hybrid ANC systems, see
where N.sub.1=N.sub.2 are the numbers of Adaptive Filter weights.
[0123] The value of step-size .sub.max, see equation (13) increases the duration of the transient process of an Adaptive Filter in use, because the time-constant of transient process of the gradient search based Adaptive Algorithms depends on the step-size value in the following way: time constant is decreased (transient process is decreased) if the step-size is increased.
[0124] Problem 2: Architectures of the FF, FB and Hybrid ANC systems, see
[0125] Problem 3: In the high quality headsets, headphones, handset etc., there is only one loudspeaker, that has to be used not only for the reproducing of anti-noise, generated by an ANC system, but also for the reproducing of other sounds, like far-end speech or music, coming from the sound-record reproducing systems or networks. An example is shown in
[0126] In the following, devices, systems and methods using the so called Filtered X modification are described.
[0127] The Filtered X modification of the FF ANC system is designed to provide the Adaptive Filter and the Adaptive Algorithm with the same Filtered-X signal, that is
x.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
where
x.sub.N.sub.
[0128] The Modified FF ANC system 90 is shown in
[0129] Opposite to the FF ANC system 50, see
[0130] Step 1. From the error signal a.sub.1(k), the noise signal d(k) in the plane of error microphone 103 is estimated as
[0131] For that, the signal y.sub.1(k), produced by the Adaptive Filter Copy 323 in the same way as in the FF ANC system 50, see
z.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
where
y.sub.N.sub.
[0132] Step 2. The error signal for Adaptive Algorithm 231 is defined as
i.e. the error signal in the Modified FF ANC system 90, see
[0133] So, the acoustic noise compensation path in
[0134] This solution allows to estimate the maximal step-size value .sub.max as in equation (22) for the gradient search based Adaptive Algorithms, used in Modified ANC system 90, see
[0135] If an ANC system 50, 60, 70 is used in the high quality headsets, headphones, handset etc., i.e. the devices similar to 80a, 80b, 80c with only one loudspeaker 107 as shown in
[0136] In the FF ANC system, see
[0137] So, acoustically produced error signal
a.sub.1(k)=d(k)+n(k)+s.sub.1(k)z.sub.1(k) (29)
contains the far-end signal s(k), acoustically filtered by secondary path 105 as
s.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
where
s.sub.N.sub.
[0138] The signal s.sub.1(k) disturbs the adaptation process and even makes the adaptation impossible, because the signal is the high-level additive noise that is not modelled by the Adaptive Filter Copy 323.
[0139] The signal
s.sub.1(k)=h.sub.N.sub.
which is the estimate of the signal s.sub.1(k), where
s.sub.N.sub.
is subtracted from the error signal a.sub.1(k), see equation (29). This produces the far-end signal free estimate of the ANC system error signal
a.sub.1(k)=a.sub.1(k)s.sub.1(k)=d(k)+n(k)+s.sub.1(k)z.sub.1(k)s.sub.1(k)d(k)+n(k)z.sub.1(k), (34)
i.e., about the same error signal as that of the FF ANC 50, see
[0140] This allows for the FF ANC system 95, see
[0141] The weights h.sub.N.sub.
[0142] As the ANC system 95, see
[0143] This noise activity can be detected, if to use the estimation of the signal d(k)+n(k). The estimation is produced by a circuit, shown in the bottom part of
[0144] So, according to the disclosure, a number of solutions, presented in
[0145] What is particularly important, the ANC operation, i.e. acoustic noise cancellation, has to be done during the far-end signal activity. As the signal is not the anti-noise, it will disturb the ANC system. The far-end signal has to be estimated and subtracted from the signals, received by the error microphone, prior to the sending to adaptive filters of the ANC system.
[0146] The technologies, described above, see
[0147] The most general architecture is one of the Modified Hybrid ANC systems with far-end signal compensation, see
[0148] The following reference signs are used in the description below with respect to
[0149] 101: primary acoustic path
[0150] 102: noise source
[0151] 103: microphone
[0152] 105: secondary acoustic path
[0153] 107: canceling loudspeaker
[0154] 104: first input
[0155] 106: first output
[0156] 111: first electrical compensation path
[0157] 121: second electrical compensation path
[0158] 140: first node
[0159] 153: third subtraction unit
[0160] 227: second subtraction unit
[0161] 223: first subtraction unit
[0162] 206: second output
[0163] 211: third electrical compensation path
[0164] 221: fourth electrical compensation path
[0165] 240: second node
[0166] 151: delay element
[0167] 202: third input
[0168] 115: first reproduction filter
[0169] 113: first adaptive filter
[0170] 123: replica of the first adaptive filter
[0171] 125: second reproduction filter
[0172] 120: first tap
[0173] 315: third reproduction filter
[0174] 313: second adaptive filter
[0175] 323: replica of the second adaptive filter
[0176] 325: fourth reproduction filter
[0177] 220: second tap
[0178] 131: first adaptation circuit
[0179] 231: second adaptation circuit
[0180] 204: error signal
[0181] 208: third output
[0182] 215: fifth reproduction filter
[0183] 217: sixth reproduction filter.
[0184]
[0185] The active noise cancellation device 100 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 100 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104 to provide the first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k). The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0186] The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled by a third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104. The active noise cancellation device 100 further includes: a second output 206 for providing a second noise canceling signal y.sub.1(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a third electrical compensation path 211; and a fourth electrical compensation path 221. The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled in parallel between a second node 240 and the first input 104. The second node 240 provides a feed-forward prediction of the noise source 102 and the first node 140 provides a feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0187] The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled by the third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104. The active noise cancellation device 100 includes a delay element 151 coupled between the first input 104 and the first node 140 for providing the feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0188] The active noise cancellation device 100 further includes a third input 202 for receiving a far-end speaker signal s(k). The third input 202 is coupled together with the first output 106 and the second output 206 to the canceling loudspeaker 107. The active noise cancellation device 100 further includes a fifth reproduction filter 215 coupled between the third input 202 and an error input of the first adaptation circuit 131. The fifth reproduction filter 215 reproduces an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0189] The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptive filter 113. The first reproduction filter 115 reproduces an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0190] The third electrical compensation path 211 includes a third reproduction filter 315 cascaded with a second adaptive filter 313, the third reproduction filter 315 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0191] The active noise cancellation device 100 includes a first adaptation circuit 131 configured to adjust filter weights of the first adaptive filter 113; and a second adaptation circuit 231 configured to adjust filter weights of the second adaptive filter 313.
[0192] The Modified Hybrid ANC system with far-end signal compensation 100, see
[0193] Here, the far-end signal free error signal a(k) for modified adaptive filters 113, 313 is determined in three steps as
[0194] The input signal for the FB branch of adaptive filter is estimated as
[0195] The signal in equation (39) is also used for noise activity detection.
[0196]
[0197] The active noise cancellation device 200 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 200 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104 to provide the first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k). The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0198] The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled by a third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104. The active noise cancellation device 200 includes a delay element 151 coupled between the first input 104 and the first node 140 for providing the feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0199] The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptive filter 113, the first reproduction filter 115 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0200] The Modified FB ANC system 200, see
[0201] In the Modified FB ANC system 200, see
i.e. is the same as u.sub.2(k), used for the generation of predicted signal x.sub.2(k) of noise source, see
[0202] Other distinguishing features of the Modified FB ANC system, see
[0203]
[0204] The active noise cancellation device 300 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 300 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104 to provide the first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k). The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0205] The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled by a third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104. The active noise cancellation device 300 further includes: a second output 206 for providing a second noise canceling signal y.sub.1(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a third electrical compensation path 211; and a fourth electrical compensation path 221. The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled in parallel between a second node 240 and the first input 104. The second node 240 provides a feed-forward prediction of the noise source 102 and the first node 140 provides a feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0206] The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled by the third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104. The active noise cancellation device 300 includes a delay element 151 coupled between the first input 104 and the first node 140 for providing the feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0207] The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptive filter 113, the first reproduction filter 115 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0208] A first tap 120 between the replica 123 of the first adaptive filter 113 and the second reproduction filter 125 is coupled to the first output 106. The third electrical compensation path 211 includes a third reproduction filter 315 cascaded with a second adaptive filter 313, the third reproduction filter 315 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0209] A second tap 220 between the replica 323 of the second adaptive filter 313 and the fourth reproduction filter 325 is coupled to the second output 206. The active noise cancellation device 300 includes: a first adaptation circuit 131 configured to adjust filter weights of the first adaptive filter 113; and a second adaptation circuit 231 configured to adjust filter weights of the second adaptive filter 313.
[0210] The Modified Hybrid ANC system 300, see
[0211] The Modified Hybrid ANC system 300, see
[0212] Here, the cancelled noise signal is determined as
a(k)=d(k)+n(k)z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k). (41)
[0213] The desired signal for the both Adaptive Filters 313, 113 is determined as
[0214] The error signal for the both Adaptive Algorithms 231, 131 is determined as
[0215] So, the both Adaptive Filters 313, 113, used in used the Modified Hybrid ANC system 300, can be viewed as a 2-channel adaptive filter.
[0216] The input signal for the FB branch of the filter is estimated similarly (14) as
[0217]
[0218] The active noise cancellation device 400 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 400 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104. The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0219] The active noise cancellation device 400 further includes a third input 202 for receiving a far-end speaker signal s(k). The third input 202 is coupled together with the first output 106 and to the canceling loudspeaker 107. The active noise cancellation device 400 further includes a fifth reproduction filter 215 coupled between the third input 202 and an error signal 204 of the first adaptation circuit 131, the fifth reproduction filter 215 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0220] The second electrical compensation path 121 includes a replica of the first adaptive filter 123. The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptation circuit 131 which is configured to adjust filter weights of the replica of the first adaptive filter 123.
[0221] The FB ANC system 400, see
[0222] The FB ANC system 400 with far-end signal compensation, see
a.sub.2(k)=a.sub.2(k)s.sub.2(k)=d(k)+n(k)+s.sub.2(k)z.sub.2(k)s.sub.2(k)d(k)+n(k)z.sub.2(k). (45)
[0223] The input signal for the filter 113 is estimated similarly (14) as
u.sub.2(k)=a.sub.2(k)[s.sub.2(k)z.sub.2(k)]=d(k)+n(k)+s.sub.2(k)z.sub.2(k)s.sub.2(k)+z.sub.2(k)d(k)+n(k). (46)
[0224] For that, it is possible to use the same circuit as in
[0225] The signal as defined in equation (46) is also used for noise activity detection.
[0226]
[0227] The active noise cancellation device 500 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 500 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104 to provide the first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k). The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0228] The active noise cancellation device 500 further includes a third input 202 for receiving a far-end speaker signal s(k). The third input 202 is coupled together with the first output 106 and the second output 206 to the canceling loudspeaker 107. The active noise cancellation device 500 further includes a fifth reproduction filter 215 coupled between the third input 202 and an error input of the first adaptation circuit 131, the fifth reproduction filter 215 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0229] The second electrical compensation path 121 includes a replica of the first adaptive filter 123. The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptation circuit 131 which is configured to adjust filter weights of the replica of the first adaptive filter 123.
[0230] The fourth electrical compensation path 221 includes a replica of the second adaptive filter 323. The third electrical compensation path 211 includes a third reproduction filter 315 cascaded with a second adaptation circuit 231 which is configured to adjust filter weights of the second adaptive filter 313.
[0231] The Hybrid ANC system 500, see
[0232] The Hybrid ANC system with far-end signal compensation 500, see
[0233] Here
a(k)=d(k)+n(k)+s.sub.1(k)z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k) (47)
and the error signal for the both Adaptive Algorithms 231, 131 is produced as
a(k)=a(k)s.sub.1(k)=d(k)+n(k)z.sub.1(k)z.sub.2(k) (48)
[0234] The input signal for the filter 113 is estimated similarly (14) as
[0235] The signal as defined in equation (49) is also used for noise activity detection.
[0236]
[0237] The active noise cancellation device 600 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 600 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a second output 206 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.1(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a third electrical compensation path 211 ; and a fourth electrical compensation path 221. The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled in parallel between a second node 240 and the first input 104 to provide the second noise canceling signal y.sub.1(k). The second node 240 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0238] The third electrical compensation path 211 and the fourth electrical compensation path 221 are coupled by a third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104.
[0239] The active noise cancellation device 600 further includes a third input 202 for receiving a far-end speaker signal s(k). The third input 202 is coupled together with the first output 106 and the second output 206 to the canceling loudspeaker 107. The active noise cancellation device 600 further includes a fifth reproduction filter 215 coupled between the third input 202 and an error input of the second adaptation circuit 231, the fifth reproduction filter 215 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0240] The third electrical compensation path 211 includes a third reproduction filter 315 cascaded with a second adaptive filter 313, the third reproduction filter 315 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0241] The Modified FF ANC system with far-end signal compensation 600, see
[0242] The Modified FF ANC system with far-end signal compensation 600, see
[0243] Here, the far-end signal free error signal a.sub.1(k) for the modified adaptive filter 313 is determined in 3 steps as
[0244] Noise activity can be detected, based on the estimation of the signal
[0245]
[0246] The active noise cancellation device 700 may be used for cancelling a primary acoustic path 101 between a noise source 102 and a microphone 103 by an overlying secondary acoustic path 105 between a canceling loudspeaker 107 and the microphone 103. The device 700 includes: a first input 104 for receiving a microphone signal a(k) from the microphone 103; a first output 106 for providing a first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k) to the canceling loudspeaker 107; a first electrical compensation path 111; and a second electrical compensation path 121. The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled in parallel between a first node 140 and the first input 104 to provide the first noise canceling signal y.sub.2(k). The first node 140 provides a prediction of the noise source 102.
[0247] The first electrical compensation path 111 and the second electrical compensation path 121 are coupled by a third subtraction unit 153 to the first input 104.
[0248] The active noise cancellation device 700 includes a delay element 151 coupled between the first input 104 and the first node 140 for providing the feed-backward prediction of the noise source 102.
[0249] The active noise cancellation device 700 further includes a third input 202 for receiving a far-end speaker signal s(k). The third input 202 is coupled together with the first output 106 to the canceling loudspeaker 107. The active noise cancellation device 700 further includes a fifth reproduction filter 215 coupled between the third input 202 and an error input of the first adaptation circuit 131, the fifth reproduction filter 215 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0250] The first electrical compensation path 111 includes a first reproduction filter 115 cascaded with a first adaptive filter 113, the first reproduction filter 115 reproducing an electrical estimate h.sub.N.sub.
[0251] The Modified FB ANC system with far-end signal compensation 700, see
[0252] The Modified FB ANC system with far-end signal compensation 700, see
[0253] Here, the far-end signal free error signal a.sub.2(k) for the modified adaptive filter 113 is determined in 3 steps as
[0254] The input signal for the adaptive filter 113 is estimated as
[0255] The signal as defined in equation (57) is also used for noise activity detection.
[0256]
[0257] To evaluate the performance of the systems described in this disclosure, a number of simulations have been conducted. For the simulations of acoustic environment, it is required to have two impulse responses: for primary and secondary paths. The impulse responses can be measured from real world environment or can be calculated, based on the mathematical model of the environment. Below, the impulse responses are obtained by means of the calculation. The details of the impulse responses calculation is out the scope of the disclosure. The calculation can be, for example, based on open-source s/w tools.
[0258] Jont B. Allen, Image method for efficiently simulation small-room acoustics, Journal of Acoustical Society of America, vol. 65, No. 4, pp. 943-950, April 1979, which is incorporated by reference, describes an image method for simulating small-room acoustics.
[0259] The required impulse responses were calculated for a rectangular room with dimensions L.sub.x=4 m, L.sub.y=5 m and L.sub.z=3 m. Wall reflection coefficient are defined by a vector [0.9; 0.7; 0.7; 0.85; 0.8; 0.9], where each of the coefficient corresponds the walls with coordinates x=L.sub.x m, x=0 m, y=L.sub.y m, y=0 m, z=L.sub.z m, z=0 m. The primary path impulse response is determined between two points of the rooms with coordinates [x.sub.r, y.sub.r, z.sub.r]=[2, 2, 1.5] m and [x.sub.e, y.sub.e, z.sub.e]=[3, 2, 1.5] m, where the lower index r denotes the reference microphone position and the lower index e denotes the error microphone position. Secondary path is determined between a loudspeaker, located in the point [x.sub.s, y.sub.s, z.sub.s]=[2.75, 2, 1.5] m, where lower index s denotes the loudspeaker position.
[0260] In the simulation, the following relation is used: h.sub.N.sub.
[0261] The acoustic impulse responses are sampled at F.sub.S=8,000 Hz frequency. The simulation can be conducted with any other impulse responses and other sampling frequencies as well. The only restriction is that the ANC system has to be realizable.
[0262] For that in the experiments the reference microphone, the loudspeaker and error microphone are installed in series order along x axis. In means, that delay (due to sound wave propagation in air) in the secondary path is less comparing with that of primary path in the case. This allows to process the signals, accepted by the reference and error microphones, and to generate anti-noise before the noise wave travels through the air from the reference microphone to the error one.
[0263] The ANC performance demonstration was conducted for the Modified Hybrid ANC system 300, see
where f.sub.0=60 Hz, .sub.i is random initial phase, equally distributed within 0 . . . 2; A.sub.i are the sin (tones) signals amplitudes, defined by the vector
A.sub.I=[0.01, 0.01, 0.02, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.3, 0.2, 0.1, 0.07, 0.02, 0.01, 0.01, 0.01, 0.02, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.3, 0.2 , 0.1, 0.07, 0.02, 0.01].sub.I (58)
and I=24.
[0264]
[0265] The additive WGN n(k) is added to error microphone, see
[0266] The noise is not added to the input signal x(k) of the primary path simulation filter h.sub.N.sub.
[0267] These two independent sources of additive noise are used to simulate the noise, that appears, for example, due to ADC signal quantization, amplifiers thermal noise etc., i.e. irremovable disturbances, that effect on the performance of any sort of adaptive filtering algorithms, and generally restrict ANC system efficiency in terms of the achievable attenuation of the noise d(k).
[0268] The effect of the noise value on ANC system calculation is out the scope of the disclosure. In the simulation, the noise variance was selected as .sub.n.sup.2=10.sup.4.
[0269] The Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) at error microphone in case of signal x(k) as WGN was
[0270] In case of signal x(k) as multi-tone one (56) the SNR was
[0271] In
[0272] The noise attenuation, defined as
for the experiments is presented in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 ANC system performance for WGN x(k) ANC type = 0.0005 = 0.001 = 0.002 = 0.005 System 70 A = 19.7554 dB A = 21.0488 dB A = 20.9811 dB Modified system 300 A = 21.1316 dB A = 21.1287 dB A = 20.5494 dB A = 17.3340 dB
[0273] The System 70 with =0.005 is unstable. So, no result is presented in the corresponding cell of the Table 1.
[0274] It follows from
[0275] So, under the same values of step-size the ANC system 70 with more weights has longer transient response and ANC system 300 with less weights (Modified one) has shorter transient response. This demonstrates an advantage of Modified ANC system 300 over system 70. Besides, because .sub.max value is restricted as in equations (13) and (22), the ANC system 70 becomes unstable since some values, while Modified ANC system 300 is still stable in the case, providing a small transient response with enlarged value.
[0276] The similar results and conclusions are also valid for the performance of the considered ANC system with multi-tone signal x(k), see equation (57). The results are presented in Table 2.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 ANC system performance for multi-tone x(k) ANC type = 0.0001 = 0.0002 = 0.0004 System 70 A = 18.1469 dB A = 18.6322 dB Modified system 300 A = 18.6432 dB A = 18.8154 dB A = 18.9599 dB
[0277] An example of ANC system performance in frequency domain is shown in
[0278] The System 70 with =0.004 is unstable. So, no result is presented in the corresponding cell of the Table 2.
[0279] The curves 1801 in PSD pictures are related to PSD of d(k)+n(k) signal (noise to be attenuated) and the curves 1802 are related to PSD of a(k) signal (attenuated noise).
[0280] It was already said, the RLS adaptive filtering algorithms cannot be used in system 70. This is confirmed by means of simulation, presented in Table 3.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 ANC system performance with RLS algorithms ANC type WGN Multi-tone noise System 70 Modified system 300 A = 21.8570 dB A = 19.2743 dB
[0281] The System 70 with RLS algorithm is unstable. So, no result is presented in the corresponding cells of the Table 3.
[0282] The RLS algorithm simulations were conducted with forgetting parameter =0.9999 and the parameter .sup.2=0.001 of the initial regularization of correlation matrix. For the parameters, see the description of the RLS adaptive filtering algorithms, e.g. as described, for example in Sayed, Diniz, Dzhigan, Farhang-Boroujeny, and Haykin.
[0283] Thus, it follows from
[0284] Modified ANC system 300, based on LMS adaptive filtering algorithm, has a shorter transient response duration comparing with that of ANC system 70, if the same step-size value is selected.
[0285] As the step-size increases, transient response in each of ANC systems is decreased. However, the ANC system 70 may become instable under some step-size value, because the value exceed .sub.max for this architecture, while Modified ANC system 300 remains stable, because its .sub.max value is bigger than that of the ANC system 70, see equations (13) and (22). Transient response duration in the RLS algorithm is the smallest, comparing with that of the LMS algorithm. Besides, the duration does not depend of type of the processed signal.
[0286] So, the above result of simulation demonstrates the overall better performance of Modified ANC architectures 300 and similar the ANC architectures described above with respect to
[0287]
[0288] The new ANC architectural solutions, can be used for acoustic noise cancellation in a number of industrial applications; in medical equipment like magnetic resonance imaging; in air ducts; in high quality headsets, headphones, handset etc., where it is required to reduce background noise in a location of a listener.
[0289] The following examples describe further implementations:
[0290] Example 1 is an architecture of the Modified Hybrid ANC system 100 with far-end sound s(k) compensation, eliminated via loudspeaker in parallel with anti-noise, see
[0291] Example 2 is the 1-st particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the Modified FB ANC system 200, see
[0292] Example 3 is the 2-nd particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the Modified Hybrid ANC system 300, see
[0293] Example 4 is the 3-rd particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the FB ANC system 400 with far-end sound s(k) compensation that is eliminated via loudspeaker in parallel with anti-noise, see
[0294] Example 5 is the 4-th particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the Hybrid ANC system 500 with far-end sound s(k) compensation that is eliminated via loudspeaker in parallel with anti-noise, see
[0295] Example 6 is the 6-th particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the Modified FF ANC system 600 with far-end sound s(k) compensation that is eliminated via loudspeaker in parallel with anti-noise, see
[0296] Example 7 is the 7-th particular case of the architecture of Example 1, that is the architecture of the Modified FB ANC system 700 with far-end sound s(k) compensation that is eliminated via loudspeaker in parallel with anti-noise, see
[0297] The present disclosure supports both a hardware and a computer program product including computer executable code or computer executable instructions that, when executed, causes at least one computer to execute the performing and computing steps described herein, in particular the method 1900 as described above with respect to
[0298] While a particular feature or aspect of the disclosure may have been disclosed with respect to only one of several implementations, such feature or aspect may be combined with one or more other features or aspects of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application. Furthermore, to the extent that the terms include, have, with, or other variants thereof are used in either the detailed description or the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term comprise. Also, the terms exemplary, for example and e.g. are merely meant as an example, rather than the best or optimal. The terms coupled and connected, along with derivatives may have been used. It should be understood that these terms may have been used to indicate that two elements cooperate or interact with each other regardless whether they are in direct physical or electrical contact, or they are not in direct contact with each other.
[0299] Although specific aspects have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that a variety of alternate and/or equivalent implementations may be substituted for the specific aspects shown and described without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. This application is intended to cover any adaptations or variations of the specific aspects discussed herein.
[0300] Although the elements in the following claims are recited in a particular sequence with corresponding labeling, unless the claim recitations otherwise imply a particular sequence for implementing some or all of those elements, those elements are not necessarily intended to be limited to being implemented in that particular sequence.
[0301] Many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the above teachings. Of course, those skilled in the art readily recognize that there are numerous applications of the disclosure beyond those described herein. While the present disclosure has been described with reference to one or more particular embodiments, those skilled in the art recognize that many changes may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents, the disclosure may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.