Archive of the former Yahoo!Groups mailing list: MOTM

previous by date index next by date
  topic list  

Subject: FW: [motm] Re: [Q] Voiced vs. Unvoiced?

From: "Tkacs, Ken" <ken.tkacs@...>
Date: 2003-01-13

Some vocoders, like my old Korg DVP, simply have a highpass filter and pass
that to the output! The assumption is that the only important information
"way up there" is the sibilance and plosives that are difficult to emulate,
so it just passes them.



-----Original Message-----
From: konkuro <konkuro@...> [mailto:konkuro@...]

One easy way to extract voiced/unvoiced information (as I recall) is
to use a high-pass filter with a cutoff at 12 kHz or so. Plosive and
fricative sounds have more energy in the higher regions of the
spectrum, so when an S or F or P or whatever is spoken, the HP filter
passes the high spectra which is rectified and used to trip a Schmidt
trigger (threshold detector). This is used to control an electronic
switch, which switches from the default carrier to a noise source.
As soon as the unvoiced sound is over, the switch reverts back.

johnm