JVC, 3D sound from two speakers? 'Fo shizzle?
Audio/Video / Victor/JVC
Posted by zmcnulty on Oct 07, 2004 - 07:52 PM
|
|
I've been real suspect when it comes to creating 3D sound from two speakers. Beyond the technology demonstrated at NTT's R&D center, I have a hard time imagining exactly how two speakers could do the work of four (or more).
But when you think about it harder, you only have two ears, right? Let's hope so. Yet you can probably place sounds - it's not like you have a set of ears on the back of your head and another set on the front.
JVC has applied the "two eared" concept to microphones for camcorders. Expect to see these introduced as early as Spring 2005.
Japan Victor Corporation announced on the 5th that they have developed "Biphonic 3D Surround," which will record bin-aural audio using a microphone attached to each ear, process the signal using an independently developed digital signal processor, to successfully recreate the direction and distances of sounds. As far as systems that require no special editing go, this is the world's first.
JVC has said, "Because digital video cameras are getting small and smaller, the left and right channels for a stereo microphone become too close together; this makes it difficult to recreate the stereo effect. This has been developed over many years using independent sound placement playback technology, which is based on fundamental tone research." It is intended for use on video cameras. JVC plans for commercialization of a digital video cameras containing basic implementations of this technology around Spring of 2005.
Using a newly developed high-efficiency small bin-aural microphone, audio close to what is heard by one's own ears is recorded to a DV tape along with the video. Because audio must be collected near the ears, inner-ear type microphones are used. Although bin-aural recording systems themselves have existed, the fundamental principle requires the use of headphones to achieve a high level of presence - playing them back on speakers would result in too much crosstalk, essentially eliminating the "3-dimensionality" of the audio.
Enter JVC's new technology, dubbed "Trans-Aural Processing." The recorded audio will undergo Trans-Aural Processing inside the DSP, and a high level of precense can be represented even on speakers - allowing for a high stereo audio grade with little antiphasing or personal differences. JVC has said this makes the playback of distance and height, or audio on three dimensions, possible.
Playback requires no special system, and can be done on normal TVs and the stereo speakers of typical audio systems.
 
Inspired by: http://www.watch.impress.co.jp/av/docs/20041006/victor.htm [1]
News Release: http://www.victor.co.jp/press/2004/biphonic3d.html [2]
|
This article is from TechJapan
http://www.techjapan.com/
The URL for this story is:
http://www.techjapan.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=566
Links in this article
[1] http://www.watch.impress.co.jp/av/docs/20041006/victor.htm [2] http://www.victor.co.jp/press/2004/biphonic3d.html
|
|