Trond Lossius <[email protected]> wrote: > Martin Leese wrote: >> This brings the number of 3-D audio panning >> systems up to four: >> >> DBAP -- Distance-Based Amplitude Panning >> VDP -- Vector Distance Panning >> VBAP -- Vector-Based Amplitide Panning >> Ambisonics > > And we could add: > > WFS - Wave Field Synthesis > ViMiC - Virtual Microphone Technique > AEP - Ambisonics Equivalent Panning
Never heard of AEP. Can anybody suggest a reference for this? I didn't think people used WFS for 3-D (because it requires a very large number of speakers). >> Are these all distinct techniques, or are some >> of them different names for the same >> technique? > > VDP and DBAP is based on the same idea, but DBAP as presented in the ICMC > 2009 paper > http://www.trondlossius.no/system/fileattachments/30/original/icmc2009-dbap.pdf The only reference I could find for VDP was some MATLAB code (VDPgain_dist.m) in a Spatial Audio Matlab Toolbox (SpatialAudioMATLABToolbox.zip). >> Also, there is a Wikipedia article on >> Ambisonics. Could I encourage people who >> are familiar with the other techniques to create >> Wikipedia articles on them. > > Yes, that would be useful. I'll see what I can do early next year. Do > Wikipedia have any etiquette regarding whether you can (not) write up on > subject areas that you have been a major contributor to? I know that > wikipedia articles should not contain original research. Providing that you cite conference or journal papers then this is not considered oriiginal research. Citing your own website is frowned upon so, if you want to do that, simply ask somebody else to cite it. Regards, Martin -- Martin J Leese E-mail: martin.leese stanfordalumni.org Web: http://members.tripod.com/martin_leese/ _______________________________________________ Sursound mailing list [email protected] https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound
