Abstract

Binaural auralization through proper room-acoustic simulation can produce a realistic listening experience as if the listener were sitting in a room with spatial perception, including enveloping reverberance. Based on analysis of experimentally measured binaural room-acoustic data, this paper discusses an approach to creating artificial but natural-sounding reverberation for binaural rendering that can be employed in simulating such an environment in an efficient way. Approaches to adjusting the spaciousness of enveloping reverberance within the context of artificially generated reverberation are investigated via hearing tests. This paper exploits the excellent pseudorandom properties of maximum-length sequences to generate deterministic and controllable decorrelations between binaural channels for artificial reverberation for room-acoustic simulations with high computational efficiency. To achieve natural-sounding enveloping reverberance in an enclosed space, and thereby an immersive environment, the shapes of both the reverberation energy decays and the spatial characteristics are found to be decisive. This paper discusses systematic hearing test results that support the mentioned finding.

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