Several mel-band-based metrics and a single MFCC-based error metric were evaluated for best correspondence with human discrimination of single tones resynthesized from similar musical instrument time-varying spectra. Results show high levels of correspondence that are very close and often nearly identical to those found previously for harmonic and critical-band error metrics. The number of spectrum-related terms in the metrics required to achieve 85% R(2) correspondence is about five for harmonics, ten for mel bands, and ten for MFCCs, leading to the conjecture that subjects discriminate more on the basis of the first few harmonics than on the broad spectral envelope
Previous research has established that time-varying spectral envelope shape is critical to instrumen...
Instrument tones were compressed using an MP3 codec to determine how the detection of compressed sou...
In this paper, a new type of metric that defines the similarity between musical audio signals is pro...
The correspondence of various spectral difference error metrics to human discrimination data was inv...
The correspondence of various error metrics to human discrimination data was investigated. Time‐vary...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of eight sustained musical instrument tones were approximated using pie...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of eight sustained musical instrument tones were approximated using pie...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of instrument tones were approximated using piecewise‐linear segments t...
cote interne IRCAM: McAdams99c/National audienceThe perceptual salience of several outstanding featu...
Several features were compared with regard to recognition performance in a musical instrument recogn...
Various methods have been used in an attempt to reveal salient parameters for musical timbre percept...
In musical instrument timbre perception, it is well known that one of the most salient parameters is...
We know that musical instrument tones are recognizable even if they are altered. The current study i...
Recent parameter matching methods for multiple wavetable synthesis have used a simple relative spect...
The four experiments reported here measure listeners’ accuracy and consistency in adjusting a forman...
Previous research has established that time-varying spectral envelope shape is critical to instrumen...
Instrument tones were compressed using an MP3 codec to determine how the detection of compressed sou...
In this paper, a new type of metric that defines the similarity between musical audio signals is pro...
The correspondence of various spectral difference error metrics to human discrimination data was inv...
The correspondence of various error metrics to human discrimination data was investigated. Time‐vary...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of eight sustained musical instrument tones were approximated using pie...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of eight sustained musical instrument tones were approximated using pie...
Harmonic amplitude envelopes of instrument tones were approximated using piecewise‐linear segments t...
cote interne IRCAM: McAdams99c/National audienceThe perceptual salience of several outstanding featu...
Several features were compared with regard to recognition performance in a musical instrument recogn...
Various methods have been used in an attempt to reveal salient parameters for musical timbre percept...
In musical instrument timbre perception, it is well known that one of the most salient parameters is...
We know that musical instrument tones are recognizable even if they are altered. The current study i...
Recent parameter matching methods for multiple wavetable synthesis have used a simple relative spect...
The four experiments reported here measure listeners’ accuracy and consistency in adjusting a forman...
Previous research has established that time-varying spectral envelope shape is critical to instrumen...
Instrument tones were compressed using an MP3 codec to determine how the detection of compressed sou...
In this paper, a new type of metric that defines the similarity between musical audio signals is pro...