Content deleted Content added
→Encoding audio signals: made wording more precise |
→Basic Principles: clarification of the conclusion. |
||
Line 5:
The utility of SBC is perhaps best illustrated with a specific example. When used for audio compression, SBC exploits what might be considered a deficiency of the human auditory system. Human ears are normally sensitive to a wide range of frequencies, but when a sufficiently loud signal is present at one frequency, the ear will not hear weaker signals at nearby frequencies. We say that the louder signal masks the softer ones. The louder signal is called the masker, and the point at which masking occurs is known, appropriately enough, as the masking threshold.
The basic idea of SBC is to enable a data reduction by discarding information about frequencies which are masked. The result
==Encoding audio signals==
|