Gurinder Singh
2010-Jun-04 09:16 UTC
[Speex-dev] Denoise causing drain pipe effect in audio
Hi I have been developing an audio application using Speex. To reduce the background noise in the captured audio I have enabled the denoise feature and set the noise suppression level to 60. Although the constant background noise is reduced but using denoise introduces a weird effect in the audio which can be described as 'Drain Pipe' effect. Has anyone faced a simiar issue with the denoise. If yes how did u manage to solve it or reduce this effect. Thanks, Gurinder
Jean-Marc Valin
2010-Jun-04 11:37 UTC
[Speex-dev] Denoise causing drain pipe effect in audio
On 10-06-04 05:16 AM, Gurinder Singh wrote:> I have been developing an audio application using Speex. To reduce the > background noise in the captured audio I have enabled the denoise > feature and set the noise suppression level to 60.There you go, don't do that. There's a reason that's not the default. If increasing that level didn't cause artefacts, I would have set it higher by default. Jean-Marc> Although the > constant background noise is reduced but using denoise introduces a > weird effect in the audio which can be described as 'Drain Pipe' > effect. > > Has anyone faced a simiar issue with the denoise. If yes how did u > manage to solve it or reduce this effect. > > Thanks, > Gurinder > _______________________________________________ > Speex-dev mailing list > Speex-dev at xiph.org > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/speex-dev > >
Gurinder Singh
2010-Jun-04 11:58 UTC
[Speex-dev] Denoise causing drain pipe effect in audio
Hi Jean Thanks for the reply. We expect to use the codec in an environment where we expect very high background noise where high noise suppression will be needed. In a situation like a soccer match. Is there a way of retaining high noise suppression and still getting better audio quality. Your pointers will be of great help. Thanks, Gurinder On 6/4/10, Jean-Marc Valin <jean-marc.valin at usherbrooke.ca> wrote:> On 10-06-04 05:16 AM, Gurinder Singh wrote: >> I have been developing an audio application using Speex. To reduce the >> background noise in the captured audio I have enabled the denoise >> feature and set the noise suppression level to 60. > > There you go, don't do that. There's a reason that's not the default. If > increasing that level didn't cause artefacts, I would have set it higher > by default. > > Jean-Marc > >> Although the >> constant background noise is reduced but using denoise introduces a >> weird effect in the audio which can be described as 'Drain Pipe' >> effect. >> >> Has anyone faced a simiar issue with the denoise. If yes how did u >> manage to solve it or reduce this effect. >> >> Thanks, >> Gurinder >> _______________________________________________ >> Speex-dev mailing list >> Speex-dev at xiph.org >> http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/speex-dev >> >> > _______________________________________________ > Speex-dev mailing list > Speex-dev at xiph.org > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/speex-dev >
Steve Underwood
2010-Jun-05 04:17 UTC
[Speex-dev] Denoise causing drain pipe effect in audio
On 06/04/2010 07:37 PM, Jean-Marc Valin wrote:> On 10-06-04 05:16 AM, Gurinder Singh wrote: > >> I have been developing an audio application using Speex. To reduce the >> background noise in the captured audio I have enabled the denoise >> feature and set the noise suppression level to 60. >> > There you go, don't do that. There's a reason that's not the default. If > increasing that level didn't cause artefacts, I would have set it higher > by default. > > Jean-Marc > > >> Although the >> constant background noise is reduced but using denoise introduces a >> weird effect in the audio which can be described as 'Drain Pipe' >> effect. >> >> Has anyone faced a simiar issue with the denoise. If yes how did u >> manage to solve it or reduce this effect. >> >> Thanks, >> Gurinder >>I've never heard a single mic denoiser that doesn't sound best in the "off" position. :-) Steve