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Advanced Multi-Band Excitation : ウィキペディア英語版
Multi-Band Excitation

Multi-Band Excitation (''MBE'') is a series of proprietary speech coding standards developed by Digital Voice Systems, Inc. (DVSI).
== Overview ==
In 1967 Osamu Fujimura (MIT) showed basic advantages of the multi-band representation of speech ("An Approximation to Voice Aperiodicity", IEEE 1968). This work gave a start to development of the "multi-band excitation" method of speech coding, that was patented in 1988 by founders of DVSI as "Multi-Band Excitation" (MBE).
All consequent improvements known as Improved Multi-Band Excitation (IMBE), ''Advanced Multiband Excitation'' (AMBE), AMBE+ and AMBE+2 are based on this MBE method.
AMBE is a codebook-based vocoder that operates at bitrates of between 2 and 9.6 kbit/s, and at a sampling rate of 8 kHz in 20-ms frames. The audio data is usually combined with up to 7 bit/s of forward error correction data, producing a total RF bandwidth of approximately 2,250 Hz (compared to 2,700–3,000 Hz for an analogue single sideband transmission). Lost frames can be masked by using the parameters of the previous frame to fill in the gap.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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