Abstract

Stereophonic sound becomes more and more important in a growing number of applications (such as teleconferencing, multimedia workstations, televideo gaming, etc.) where spatial realism is demanded. Such hands-free systems need stereophonic acoustic echo cancelers (AECs) to reduce echos that result from coupling between loudspeakers and microphones in full-duplex communication. We propose a new stereo AEC based on two experimental observations: (a) the stereo effect is due mostly to sound energy below about 1 kHz and (b) comb filtering above 1 kHz does not degrade auditory localization. The principle of the proposed structure is to use one stereo AEC at low frequencies (e.g. below 1 kHz) with nonlinear transformations on the input signals and another stereo AEC at higher frequencies (e.g. above 1 kHz) with complementary comb filters on the input signals.

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