Abstract
Users of audio-visual streaming services expect an ever increasing quality of experience. Channel bandwidth remains a bottleneck commonly addressed with lossy compression schemes for both the video and audio streams. Anecdotal evidence suggests a strongly perceived link between bit rate and quality. This paper presents three audio quality listening experiments using the ITU MUSHRA methodology to assess a number of audio codecs typically used by streaming services. They were assessed for a range of bit rates using three presentation modes: consumer and studio quality headphones and loudspeakers. Our results indicate that with consumer quality headphones, listeners were not differentiating between codecs with bit rates greater than 48 kb/s (p>=0.228). For studio quality headphones and loudspeakers aac-lc at 128 kb/s and higher was differentiated over other codecs (p
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CITATION STYLE
Hines, A., Skoglund, J., Gillen, E., Kokaram, A., Kelly, D., & Harte, N. (2014). Perceived audio quality for streaming stereo music. In MM 2014 - Proceedings of the 2014 ACM Conference on Multimedia (pp. 1173–1176). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2647868.2655025
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