Electronic cochlea
Posted: 26 Jun 2009 20:23
Anybody heard of biomimetics? This is a really nice example of it:
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/31172567/
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/31172567/
DUNE DISCUSSION FORUM FOR ORTHODOX HERBERTARIANS
http://www.jacurutu.com/
Surely it's the noodle that's the analyzer."The human ear is a very good spectrum analyzer," said Rahul Sarpekhkar, a professor at MIT...
Depends on the listener, both in regards to the overall health of their ears, as well as their critical listening abilities. Besides, they very much made 100hz to 10,000hz out to be the complete human hearing range in the article, which is off by entire octaves, hardly a small discrepancy.Freakzilla wrote:The audible range and inteligible ranges are very different.
Of course for human speach intelligibility only a very narrow band in the mid range is necessary, and of course room reflections will slur transients and cause peaks and dips in the frequency spectrum. I think we both know what we're talking about on this one, I'm a sound engineer and I know you know what you're talking about!Freakzilla wrote:Inteligibility depends on many factors, including the surface finishes of the room they're in, the sound pressure level, etc...
Yes, the human ear can hear a much broader range than you quoted from them but what is the point of this device?
Is it to give them bionic dog-ears? Or to allow them to hear and understand a human voice?
If it's to understand voice, that entire range is not necessary and if used can actually decrease inteligibility.
Ohhh.... I see. For some reason I couldn't see the link here at work. I wouldn't doubt it's ability to seperate frequencies better, people have a hard time with that. Especially people who have ridden in tanks and fired machine guns.A Thing of Eternity wrote:Of course for human speach intelligibility only a very narrow band in the mid range is necessary, and of course room reflections will slur transients and cause peaks and dips in the frequency spectrum. I think we both know what we're talking about on this one, I'm a sound engineer and I know you know what you're talking about!Freakzilla wrote:Inteligibility depends on many factors, including the surface finishes of the room they're in, the sound pressure level, etc...
Yes, the human ear can hear a much broader range than you quoted from them but what is the point of this device?
Is it to give them bionic dog-ears? Or to allow them to hear and understand a human voice?
If it's to understand voice, that entire range is not necessary and if used can actually decrease inteligibility.
This device in the article has nothing to do with hearing sound - it is a radio antennea that can hear and seperate many frequencies at once, which is why they compare it to the human ear (plus the cochlea was the inspiration).
Cool. I know most intercoms and such are specifically designed to sound like shite (all high-mids, no real lows or treble) in order to absolutely maximize intelligibility. I've never heard of an intelligibility metre, I would assume it's a spectrum/envelope analyser that measures frequency content (more mids=more clearity) and attack to sustain ratios (more attack=clearer consonants)... I would assume anyways, not that I really know how such a device would work. Does it come with any explanation of what it is measuring?Freakzilla wrote:Ohhh.... I see. For some reason I couldn't see the link here at work. I wouldn't doubt it's ability to seperate frequencies better, people have a hard time with that. Especially people who have ridden in tanks and fired machine guns.A Thing of Eternity wrote:Of course for human speach intelligibility only a very narrow band in the mid range is necessary, and of course room reflections will slur transients and cause peaks and dips in the frequency spectrum. I think we both know what we're talking about on this one, I'm a sound engineer and I know you know what you're talking about!Freakzilla wrote:Inteligibility depends on many factors, including the surface finishes of the room they're in, the sound pressure level, etc...
Yes, the human ear can hear a much broader range than you quoted from them but what is the point of this device?
Is it to give them bionic dog-ears? Or to allow them to hear and understand a human voice?
If it's to understand voice, that entire range is not necessary and if used can actually decrease inteligibility.
This device in the article has nothing to do with hearing sound - it is a radio antennea that can hear and seperate many frequencies at once, which is why they compare it to the human ear (plus the cochlea was the inspiration).![]()
I went to a Mass Notification (Weather, Chemical, Terror/Gunman, etc...) seminar this morning and inteligibility (speakers with voice instead of a horn or bell) is one of the things they (code officials, engineers, etc...) are pushing. That has been the trend with Fire Alarms for quite some time. Due to the durability of existing FA products, they are trying to integrate the mass notification. My office recently purchased an "intelligibility meter". A few years back I would never have believed in such a thing.
The Marriot served up a damned fine breakfast, by the way!
They introduced a "Giant Voice" system for outdoor notification that runs up to 3200 W of speakers on 200 mA from DC batteries! It only uses AC power to charge the batteries, which can also be charged by a solar panel. Most impressive. I think it's magic.
Oh okay, this is actually much simpler than I thought. I was imagining something that measured the frequency content and envelope of "whatever" audio to determine how intelligible the sound is. What you're describing here is something we use in live audio and recording all the time, it's called "pinking" - you play "pink noise" which is just a crazy mix of frequencies, sounds like static on the TV, through your sound system, then a high qaulity mic and analysis software to tell how much damage your sound system/room is doing to the audio. Sometimes something other than pink noise is used, like crazy whale sounds and sweeping frequencies etc.Freakzilla wrote:http://www.gold-line.com/dsp2.htm
"The STI-PA test signal contains known modulation rates and by measuring the difference in the
sound heard from the known sound played, we can derive the STI number."
It comes with a CD that you play through the system speakers and it compares what it hears to what it is supposed to sound like.
I think it even has a cigar lighter.
Oh of course, I try to make things sound nice/accurate - you have to make sure people can understand the voice yelling "your building is on fire! get the fuck out!!!".Freakzilla wrote:The signal on this thing sounds like whale songs, but not as nice.
The old requirement for Fire Alarm was just a SPL measurement to make sure it is a certain amount above ambient noise.
You have to understand, you probably design for quality whereas I usually design to meet the minimum code requirement.
9/11 has shaken my industry from the ground up.
Fire alarms are required by law so it's a steady business... as steady as construction and remodeling that is.A Thing of Eternity wrote:9/11 has probably made your industry very busy, and yes, very picky. Was there a huge surge after the attacks?
I think it relates more from the fires of the Twin Towers and how many technical aspects (Freak can cover that) have evolved since then...SadisticCynic wrote:I'm not trying to be ignorant or insensitive or anything, but how does 9/11, a terrorist attack, influence fire alarms? I don't think an advanced fire alarm regulation would have saved many people...
One of the speakers at the seminar I went to earlier this week was Fire Commissioner durring the 9/11 attacks.SadisticCynic wrote:I'm not trying to be ignorant or insensitive or anything, but how does 9/11, a terrorist attack, influence fire alarms? I don't think an advanced fire alarm regulation would have saved many people...