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Fundamentals of differential beamforming

This book provides a systematic study of the fundamental theory and methods of beamforming with differential microphone arrays (DMAs), or differential beamforming in short. It begins with a brief overview of differential beamforming and some popularly used DMA beampatterns such as the dipole, cardio...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Benesty, Jacob, Chen, Jingdong, Pan, Chao
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1046-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2151679
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author Benesty, Jacob
Chen, Jingdong
Pan, Chao
author_facet Benesty, Jacob
Chen, Jingdong
Pan, Chao
author_sort Benesty, Jacob
collection CERN
description This book provides a systematic study of the fundamental theory and methods of beamforming with differential microphone arrays (DMAs), or differential beamforming in short. It begins with a brief overview of differential beamforming and some popularly used DMA beampatterns such as the dipole, cardioid, hypercardioid, and supercardioid, before providing essential background knowledge on orthogonal functions and orthogonal polynomials, which form the basis of differential beamforming. From a physical perspective, a DMA of a given order is defined as an array that measures the differential acoustic pressure field of that order; such an array has a beampattern in the form of a polynomial whose degree is equal to the DMA order. Therefore, the fundamental and core problem of differential beamforming boils down to the design of beampatterns with orthogonal polynomials. But certain constraints also have to be considered so that the resulting beamformer does not seriously amplify the sensors’ self noise and the mismatches among sensors. Accordingly, the book subsequently revisits several performance criteria, which can be used to evaluate the performance of the derived differential beamformers. Next, differential beamforming is placed in a framework of optimization and linear system solving, and it is shown how different beampatterns can be designed with the help of this optimization framework. The book then presents several approaches to the design of differential beamformers with the maximum DMA order, with the control of the white noise gain, and with the control of both the frequency invariance of the beampattern and the white noise gain. Lastly, it elucidates a joint optimization method that can be used to derive differential beamformers that not only deliver nearly frequency-invariant beampatterns, but are also robust to sensors’ self noise.
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spelling cern-21516792021-04-21T19:42:43Zdoi:10.1007/978-981-10-1046-0http://cds.cern.ch/record/2151679engBenesty, JacobChen, JingdongPan, ChaoFundamentals of differential beamformingEngineeringThis book provides a systematic study of the fundamental theory and methods of beamforming with differential microphone arrays (DMAs), or differential beamforming in short. It begins with a brief overview of differential beamforming and some popularly used DMA beampatterns such as the dipole, cardioid, hypercardioid, and supercardioid, before providing essential background knowledge on orthogonal functions and orthogonal polynomials, which form the basis of differential beamforming. From a physical perspective, a DMA of a given order is defined as an array that measures the differential acoustic pressure field of that order; such an array has a beampattern in the form of a polynomial whose degree is equal to the DMA order. Therefore, the fundamental and core problem of differential beamforming boils down to the design of beampatterns with orthogonal polynomials. But certain constraints also have to be considered so that the resulting beamformer does not seriously amplify the sensors’ self noise and the mismatches among sensors. Accordingly, the book subsequently revisits several performance criteria, which can be used to evaluate the performance of the derived differential beamformers. Next, differential beamforming is placed in a framework of optimization and linear system solving, and it is shown how different beampatterns can be designed with the help of this optimization framework. The book then presents several approaches to the design of differential beamformers with the maximum DMA order, with the control of the white noise gain, and with the control of both the frequency invariance of the beampattern and the white noise gain. Lastly, it elucidates a joint optimization method that can be used to derive differential beamformers that not only deliver nearly frequency-invariant beampatterns, but are also robust to sensors’ self noise.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:21516792016
spellingShingle Engineering
Benesty, Jacob
Chen, Jingdong
Pan, Chao
Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title_full Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title_fullStr Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title_full_unstemmed Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title_short Fundamentals of differential beamforming
title_sort fundamentals of differential beamforming
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1046-0
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2151679
work_keys_str_mv AT benestyjacob fundamentalsofdifferentialbeamforming
AT chenjingdong fundamentalsofdifferentialbeamforming
AT panchao fundamentalsofdifferentialbeamforming