Litcius/Paper detail

Sound field reconstruction in rooms: Inpainting meets super-resolution

Francesc Lluís, Pablo Martínez-Nuevo, Martin Bo Møller, Sven Ewan Shepstone

2020The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this paper, a deep-learning-based method for sound field reconstruction is proposed. The possibility to reconstruct the magnitude of the sound pressure in the frequency band 30-300 Hz for an entire room by using a very low number of irregularly distributed microphones arbitrarily arranged is shown. Moreover, the approach is agnostic to the location of the measurements in the Euclidean space. In particular, the presented approach uses a limited number of arbitrary discrete measurements of the magnitude of the sound field pressure in order to extrapolate this field to a higher-resolution grid of discrete points in space with a low computational complexity. The method is based on a U-net-like neural network with partial convolutions trained solely on simulated data, which itself is constructed from numerical simulations of Green's function across thousands of common rectangular rooms. Although extensible to three dimensions and different room shapes, the method focuses on reconstructing the two-dimensional plane of a rectangular room from measurements of the three-dimensional sound field. Experiments using simulated data together with an experimental validation in a real listening room are shown. The results suggest a performance which may exceed conventional reconstruction techniques for a low number of microphones and computational requirements.

Topics & Concepts

AcousticsComputer scienceInpaintingSound pressurePlane (geometry)Field (mathematics)Function (biology)Magnitude (astronomy)AlgorithmArtificial intelligenceArtificial neural networkComputer visionGridPosition (finance)Space (punctuation)Sound (geography)MathematicsPoint cloudHearing Loss and RehabilitationAerodynamics and Acoustics in Jet FlowsSpeech and Audio Processing