JBL Technical Note - Vol.1, No.26 电路原理图.pdf
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1、1. Introduction: The purpose of a sound system is to trans- mit information. In the case of public address, paging, voice alarm and speech reinforcement systems the object is to transmit intelligible speech to listeners and intended message recipients. This aspect is far more important than sound qu
2、ality per se, since there is no point in designing a system if it can not be understood or is incapable of getting the mes- sage across. Although sound quality and speech intelligibility are inextricably linked, they are not the same. It is possible to have a poor sounding system that is highly inte
3、lligible (e. g., a frequency limited re-entrant horn with uneven response) and a high quality loud- speaker that is virtually unintelligible (an expensive hi-fi system in the center of an air- craft hangar). Many factors important to speech intelligibili- ty are well understood and can be used to he
4、lp develop guidelines for successful system design. The importance of high system intelli- gibility is ever increasing, not only as the pub- lics expectation of sound quality continues to grow, but also as the need to make intelligible emergency announcements at public facilities and sports venues t
5、akes on greater impor- tance. The information presented in this broaa overview of sound reinforcement has been assembled from many sources. Through an understanding of these essential principles, users will be better able to design, install and troubleshoot sound systems for speech 2. Clarity and Au
6、dibility: A common mistake often made when dis- cussing intelligibility is to confuse audibility with clarity. Just because a sound is audible does not mean it will be intelligible. Audibility relates to hearing sound, either from a physio- logical point of view or in terms of signal-to- noise ratio
7、. Clarity describes the ability to detect the structure of a sound and, in the case of speech, to hear consonants and vow- els and to identify words correctly A speech signal involves the dimensions of sound pressure, time and frequency. Figure 1 shows a typical speech waveform for the sylla- bles J
8、, B and L. Each syllable has a duration of about 300 - 400 ms, and complete words are about 600 - 900 ms in length, dependent on their complexity and the rate of speech. A spectrographic analysis of the phrase JBL is shown in Figure 2 In this display the left (y) axis shows frequency, the bottom (x)
9、 axis shows time, and the intensity of the display shows amplitude. The lower horizontal bars in the display represent the fundamental voice Technical Notes Volume 1, Number 26 Speech Intelligibility - A JBL Professional Technical Note frequencies at approximately 150, 300, 450 and 600 Hz for the le
10、tters J and B. For the letter L the fundamentals are at approximate- ly 190, 370 and 730 Hz. Figure 1. A typical speech waveform: J-B-U, 1 1 4iU - vtltz Figure 2. Time / frequency spectrograph of JBL. Figure 3 shows a spectrum analysis of the vowel sound a and consonant sound V . The vowel is made u
11、p of a series of reso- nances produced by the vocal cord-larynx sys- tem. The s sound has a different spectrum and is continuous over a wide, high frequency range extending beyond 12 kHz. Figure 3. Spectral response of typical vowel (a) and consonant (s) sounds. Unvoiced speech sound: consonant V 3.
12、 Factors Determining or Affecting Sound System Intelligibility: Primary factors are: * Sound system bandwidth and frequency response * Loudness and signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) * Room reverberation time * Room volume, size and shape of the space * Distance from listener to loudspeaker * Directivity o
13、f the loudspeaker * Number of loudspeakers in operation * Direct to reverberant ratio (directly depend- ent upon the last five factors) * Talker annunciation/rate of delivery * Listener acuity Secondary factors include: * Gender of talker * System distortion * System equalization * Uniformity of cov
14、erage * Sound focusing and presence of any discrete reflections * Direction of sound arriving at listener * Direction of interfering noise * Vocabulary and context of speech information * Talker microphone technique The parameters marked are building or system related, while those marked relate to h
15、uman factors outside the control of the physi- cal system. It should be noted however that two of the primary factors (talker annuncia- tion/rate of delivery and listener acuity) are outside the control of both the system and building designer. Each of the above factors will now be dis- cussed. Voic
16、ed speech sound: vowel a Tilt - IS! 4. Frequency Response and Bandwidth: Speech covers the frequency range from approximately 100 Hz to 8 kHz, although there are higher harmonics affecting overall sound quality and timbre extending to 12 kHz, as seen in Figure 3. Figure 4 shows an averaged speech sp
17、ectrum and the relative frequency contributions in octave band levels. Maximum speech power is in the 250 and 500 Hz bands, falling off fairly rapidly at higher frequencies. Lower frequencies correspond to vowel sounds and the weaker upper frequencies to consonants The contributions to intelligibili
18、ty do not follow the same pattern. In Figure 5 we can clearly see that upper frequencies con- tribute most to intelligibility, with the octave band centered on 2 kHz contributing approxi- mately 30%, and the 4 and 1 kHz bands 25% and 20% respectively. Figure 6 shows this in a different manner. Here
19、the cumulative effect of increasing system bandwidth is shown, and 100% intelligibility is achieved at just over 6 kHz bandwidth. This graph is useful in that it allows the effect of limiting bandwidth to be evaluated. For example, restricting the higher frequencies to around 3.5 kHz will result in
20、a loss of about 20% of the potential intelligibility. Figure 4. Long-term speech spectrum. Figure 5. Octave-band contributions to speech intelligibility. Figure 6. Cumulative effect of high frequency band- width on intelligibility. R i q u i n-ti,1 Hi Data with respect to bandwidth and intelligi- bi
21、lity may vary according to underlying experi- mental methods. For example, Figure 7 con- trasts well known early data relating to tele- phone monophonic) measurements that do not include any room effects with a recent experiment carried out in a reverberant space with Tw = 1.5 s. The upper curve Fle
22、tcher, 1929) shows that the contribution to intelligibili- ty flattens out above 4 kHz, with little further improvement above that frequency. The lower curve, made with a sound system in a real space, shows that intelligibility improvements continue up to 10 kHz. The importance of achieving extended
23、 high frequency response is immediately seen and points up the need to ensure an adequate S/N ratio in the important intelligibility bands of 2 and 4 kHz. Figure 7. Effect of bandwidth on intelligibility. Limited bandwidth these days should gener- ally not be a problem, since most modern sound equip
24、ment can cover the spectrum important to speech intelligibility. There are however some exceptions: Imlligiailiy (*4 dB Frequency ( H i ) lr:r- in h : i I ( % ) Frequency ( H i ) * Inexpensive, poor quality microphones * Some re-entrant horn loudspeakers 1 Some inexpensive digital message storage sy
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