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Journal ArticleDOI

Predictive Coding of Speech at Low Bit Rates

Bishnu S. Atal
- 01 Apr 1982 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 4, pp 600-614
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TLDR
A new class of speech coders are described which allow one to realize the precise optimum noise spectrum which is crucial to achieving very low bit rates, but also represent the important first step in bridging the gap between waveform coders and vocoders without suffering from their limitations.
Abstract
Predictive coding is a promising approach for speech coding. In this paper, we review the recent work on adaptive predictive coding of speech signals, with particular emphasis on achieving high speech quality at low bit rates (less than 10 kbits/s). Efficient prediction of the redundant structure in speech signals is obviously important for proper functioning of a predictive coder. It is equally important to ensure that the distortion in the coded speech signal be perceptually small. The subjective loudness of quantization noise depends both on the short-time spectrum of the noise and its relation to the short-time spectrum of the Speech signal. The noise in the formant regions is partially masked by the speech signal itself. This masking of quantization noise by speech signal allows one to use low bit rates while maintaining high speech quality. This paper will present generalizations of predictive coding for minimizing subjective distortion in the reconstructed speech signal at the receiver. The quantizer in predictive coders quantizes its input on a sample-by-sample basis. Such sample-by-sample (instantaneous) quantization creates difficulty in realizing an arbitrary noise spectrum, particularly at low bit rates. We will describe a new class of speech coders in this paper which could be considered to be a generalization of the predictive coder. These new coders not only allow one to realize the precise optimum noise spectrum which is crucial to achieving very low bit rates, but also represent the important first step in bridging the gap between waveform coders and vocoders without suffering from their limitations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trends and perspectives in wideband speech coding

TL;DR: Basic concepts from both traditional speech and audio coding and their implications for wideband signals and an overview on the state of art are given and novel solutions are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

A simple noniterative speech excitation algorithm using the LPC residual

TL;DR: An analytical derivation of a simple noniterative technique for extracting a multiple impulse excitation model for synthesized speech directly from the LPC residual sequence, which is very applicable for speech enhancement where processor capability is limited.
Patent

Method and apparatus for speech coding

TL;DR: In this article, a multi-tap LTP filter with sub-sample resolution delay is proposed to model the effect of delay values with a fractional component, within the limits of the over-sampling factor used by the interpolation filter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Source coding of speech and video signals

TL;DR: Predictive coding of speech, multipulse and code-excited coders and frequency-domain coders, and intraframe and still image coding and interframe coding are examined for the coding of image and video signals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Speech research directions

TL;DR: The state of the art in speech coding, text-to-speech synthesis, speech recognition, and speaker recognition is discussed, with a focus on solving the problem of continuous speech recognition for large vocabularies and verifying talkers' identities from a limited amount of spoken text.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Speech analysis and synthesis by linear prediction of the speech wave.

TL;DR: Application of this method for efficient transmission and storage of speech signals as well as procedures for determining other speechcharacteristics, such as formant frequencies and bandwidths, the spectral envelope, and the autocorrelation function, are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictive coding--I

TL;DR: Part II will give the mathematical criterion for the best predictor for use in the predictive coding of particular messages, will give examples of such messages, and will show that the error term which is transmitted in predictive coding may always be coded efficiently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimizing digital speech coders by exploiting masking properties of the human ear

TL;DR: New results of masking and loudness reduction of noise are reported and the design principles of speech coding systems exploiting auditory masking are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictive coding of speech signals and subjective error criteria

TL;DR: Improved speech quality is obtained by efficient removal of formant and pitch-related redundant structure of speech before quantizing, and by effective masking of the quantizer noise by the speech signal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive predictive coding of speech signals

TL;DR: Preliminary studies suggest that the binary difference signal and the predictor parameters together can be transmitted at approximately 10 kilobits/second which is several times less than the bit rate required for log-PCM encoding with comparable speech quality.