Abstract

Finite-difference time-domain method has gained increasing interest for room acoustic prediction use. A well-known limitation of the method is a frequency- and direction-dependent dispersion error. In this study, the audibility of dispersion error in the presence of a single surface reflection is measured. The threshold is measured for three different distance conditions with a fixed reflection arrival azimuth angle of 54.7°. The error is placed either in the direct path, or in the reflection path. Additionally a qualitative follow-up experiment to evaluate how the measured thresholds reflect the audibility of error in short room responses is carried out. The results indicate that the threshold varies depending whether the error is in the direct path or in the reflection path. For transient signals the threshold is higher when the error is located in the direct path, whereas for speech signal, the threshold is higher when it is located in the reflection path. Evidence is found that the error is detectable in rendered room responses at the measured threshold levels.

Highlights

  • The threshold measurement for the sound sample condition speech of one of the participants was removed from the results as threshold measurement did not converge in the condition group {dispersion in the direct sound, speech} with any distance condition

  • The results of the experiment indicated that for short transient sample the dispersion error is easier to perceive when the error is located in the reflection in comparison to the condition where the dispersion is in the direct sound

  • The results give evidence that in such a case the total amount of group delay error in the signal defines the audibility, as more group delay error is accumulated in the reflection path

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A specific source of error for explicit FDTD schemes is dispersion; due to the discretization, different frequencies in the simulation domain travel with different velocities. It is inevitable that some dispersion error will remain in the simulation result

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call