A Wiener Filter Approach to the Design of Filter Bank Based Single-Carrier Precoding and Equalisation

Author(s):  
Stephan Weiss ◽  
Chi Hieu Ta ◽  
Chunguang Liu
Author(s):  
Oscar E. Castillo ◽  
Jorge Luis Flores Nuñez ◽  
Jose A. Muñoz ◽  
Ricardo Legarda

Geophysics ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norman D. Crump

It is common practice to model a reflection seismogram as a convolution of the reflectivity function of the earth and an energy waveform referred to as the seismic wavelet. The objective of the deconvolution technique described here is to extract the reflectivity function from the reflection seismogram. The most common approach to deconvolution has been the design of inverse filters based on Wiener filter theory. Some of the disadvantages of the inverse filter approach may be overcome by using a state variable representation of the earth’s reflectivity function and the seismic signal generating process. The problem is formulated in discrete state variable form to facilitate digital computer processing of digitized seismic signals. The discrete form of the Kalman filter is then used to generate an estimate of the reflectivity function. The principal advantages of this technique are its capability for handling continually time‐varying models, its adaptability to a large class of models, its suitability for either single or multi‐channel processing, and its potentially high‐resolution capabilities. Examples based on both synthetic and field seismic data illustrate the feasibility of the method.


Author(s):  
Patrick Meyer ◽  
Samy Elshamy ◽  
Tim Fingscheidt

Abstract Microphone leakage or crosstalk is a common problem in multichannel close-talk audio recordings (e.g., meetings or live music performances), which occurs when a target signal does not only couple into its dedicated microphone, but also in all other microphone channels. For further signal processing such as automatic transcription of a meeting, a multichannel speaker interference reduction is required in order to eliminate the interfering speech signals in the microphone channels. The contribution of this paper is twofold: First, we consider multichannel close-talk recordings of a three-person meeting scenario with various different crosstalk levels. In order to eliminate the crosstalk in the target microphone channel, we extend a multichannel Wiener filter approach, which considers all individual microphone channels. Therefore, we integrate an adaptive filter method, which was originally proposed for acoustic echo cancellation (AEC), in order to obtain a well-performing interferer (noise) component estimation. This results in an improved speech-to-interferer ratio by up to 2.7 dB at constant or even better speech component quality. Second, since an AEC method requires typically clean reference channels, we investigate and report findings why the AEC algorithm is able to successfully estimate the interfering signals and the room impulse responses between the microphones of the interferer and the target speakers even though the reference signals are themselves disturbed by crosstalk in the considered meeting scenario.


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 102335
Author(s):  
Yazan Alkhlefat ◽  
Amr M. Ragheb ◽  
Maged A. Esmail ◽  
Saleh A. Alshebeili ◽  
Hussein E. Seleem

2003 ◽  
Vol 114 (6) ◽  
pp. 3179-3188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sang-Myeong Kim ◽  
Semyung Wang

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