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Acoustic echo cancellation – Polycom C16 User Manual

Page 473

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Designing Audio Conferencing Systems

B - 11

However, if ceiling microphones are swaying due to the air flow from nearby

HVAC ducts, noise cancellation may not be able to completely remove that

noise.

Acoustic Echo Cancellation

In audio conferencing applications, acoustic echoes occur because an open-air

acoustic path exists between the local loudspeaker and the local microphone.

As shown in the following figure, speech originating in either the local or

remote room is transmitted over a communications network to the other room

where it is amplified and reproduced by the local loudspeaker. The output of

the loudspeaker (or multiple loudspeakers) will fill the local room and, from

many paths of reflections, reach the microphones in the local room. In the

absence of an acoustic echo canceller, this acoustically-echoed version of the

remote talker's audio is transmitted back over the network to the originating

room and is reproduced by the loudspeaker where it is perceived as an

acoustic echo.
Acoustic echoes degrade the quality of speech communications because

echoes of one's speech are subjectively annoying to the person speaking. In

fact, if the elapsed time between when a word is spoken and when its echo is

heard is more than 300 msec, the echo will actually cause most talkers to

stutter. In addition, echoes can overload communication circuits, resulting in

a feedback condition called howling. If, by the combination of loudspeaker

volume and microphone sensitivity and positioning, the echoes are louder

than the originating speech, the teleconferencing equipment, or the network

itself, can overload.
An acoustic echo canceller in the local room will remove the echo of the remote

talkers' voice so it will not be sent back to the remote talkers. Just as an acoustic

echo canceller is used in the local room to prevent echoes to be sent to the

remote participants, the remote site would have a similar audio conferencing

solution to prevent the local talker's audio from echoing back from the remote

room as shown in the following figure.

The sophisticated part of an acoustic echo canceller consist of an adaptive filter

that is nearly continuously adapting to adjust to changes in the echoes in the

room caused by changes in the local room such as participants moving

A

EC

Local Room

AEC

Remote Room

Local Room

Remote Room

Remote Talker

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A

mp

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