Characterization of acoustic signals through continuous linear time-frequency representations

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Abstract

One important field in the framework of computer music concerns the modelization of sounds. In order to design digital models mirroring as closely as possible a real sound and permitting in addition intimate transformations by altering the synthesis parameters, we look for a signal model based on additive synthesis whose parameters are estimated by the analysis of real sounds. This model is relevant from both the physical and perceptual points of view, especially when the sound to be analyzed comes from a musical instrument. We will present some techniques, mostly unpublished, based on time-frequency representations which make possible the estimation of relevant parameters such as frequency and amplitude modulation laws corresponding to each spectral component of the sound. The techniques described will extend the results presented in [3]. These methods will then be transposed to broadband signals, allowing the characterization of transients. © 1996 IEEE.

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Guillemain, P., & Kronland-Martinet, R. (1996). Characterization of acoustic signals through continuous linear time-frequency representations. Proceedings of the IEEE, 84(4), 561–585. https://doi.org/10.1109/5.488700

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