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A vocoder (, a
portmanteau In linguistics, a blend—also known as a blend word, lexical blend, or portmanteau—is a word formed by combining the meanings, and parts of the sounds, of two or more words together.
of ''vo''ice and en''coder'') is a
category Category, plural categories, may refer to: General uses *Classification, the general act of allocating things to classes/categories Philosophy * Category of being * ''Categories'' (Aristotle) * Category (Kant) * Categories (Peirce) * Category ( ...
of
speech coding Speech coding is an application of data compression to digital audio signals containing speech. Speech coding uses speech-specific parameter estimation using audio signal processing techniques to model the speech signal, combined with generic da ...
that analyzes and
synthesizes Chemical synthesis (chemical combination) is the artificial execution of chemical reactions to obtain one or several product (chemistry), products. This occurs by physics, physical and chemical manipulations usually involving one or more reaction ...
the human voice signal for
audio data compression In information theory, data compression, source coding, or bit-rate reduction is the process of encoding information using fewer bits than the original representation. Any particular compression is either lossy or lossless. Lossless compression ...
,
multiplexing In telecommunications and computer networking, multiplexing (sometimes contracted to muxing) is a method by which multiple analog or digital signals are combined into one signal over a shared medium. The aim is to share a scarce resource ...
,
voice encryption Secure voice (alternatively secure speech or ciphony) is a term in cryptography for the encryption of voice communication over a range of communication types such as radio, telephone or IP. History The implementation of voice encryption date ...
or voice transformation. The vocoder was invented in 1938 by
Homer Dudley Homer W. Dudley (14 November 1896 – 18 September 1980) was an American pioneering electronic and acoustic engineer who created the first electronic voice synthesizer for Bell Labs in the 1930s and led the development of a method of sending secu ...
at
Bell Labs Nokia Bell Labs, commonly referred to as ''Bell Labs'', is an American industrial research and development company owned by Finnish technology company Nokia. With headquarters located in Murray Hill, New Jersey, Murray Hill, New Jersey, the compa ...
as a means of synthesizing human speech. This work was developed into the channel vocoder which was used as a voice
codec A codec is a computer hardware or software component that encodes or decodes a data stream or signal. ''Codec'' is a portmanteau of coder/decoder. In electronic communications, an endec is a device that acts as both an encoder and a decoder o ...
for
telecommunications Telecommunication, often used in its plural form or abbreviated as telecom, is the transmission of information over a distance using electronic means, typically through cables, radio waves, or other communication technologies. These means of ...
for speech coding to conserve
bandwidth Bandwidth commonly refers to: * Bandwidth (signal processing) or ''analog bandwidth'', ''frequency bandwidth'', or ''radio bandwidth'', a measure of the width of a frequency range * Bandwidth (computing), the rate of data transfer, bit rate or thr ...
in transmission. By
encrypting In cryptography, encryption (more specifically, encoding) is the process of transforming information in a way that, ideally, only authorized parties can decode. This process converts the original representation of the information, known as plain ...
the control signals, voice transmission can be secured against interception. Its primary use in this fashion is for secure radio communication. The advantage of this method of encryption is that none of the original signal is sent, only envelopes of the bandpass filters. The receiving unit needs to be set up in the same filter configuration to re-synthesize a version of the original signal spectrum. The vocoder has also been used extensively as an
electronic musical instrument An electronic musical instrument or electrophone is a musical instrument that produces sound using electronics, electronic circuitry. Such an instrument sounds by outputting an electrical, electronic or digital audio signal that ultimately is ...
. The decoder portion of the vocoder, called a
voder 400px, Schematic circuit of the VODER The Bell Telephone Laboratory's Voder (abbreviation of Voice Operating Demonstrator) was the first attempt to electronically synthesize human speech by breaking it down into its acoustic components. It was ...
, can be used independently for speech synthesis.


Theory

The
human voice The human voice consists of sound Voice production, made by a human being using the vocal tract, including Speech, talking, singing, Laughter, laughing, crying, screaming, shouting, humming or yelling. The human voice frequency is specifically ...
consists of sounds generated by the periodic opening and closing of the
glottis The glottis (: glottises or glottides) is the opening between the vocal folds (the rima glottidis). The glottis is crucial in producing sound from the vocal folds. Etymology From Ancient Greek ''γλωττίς'' (glōttís), derived from ''γ ...
by the
vocal cords In humans, the vocal cords, also known as vocal folds, are folds of throat tissues that are key in creating sounds through Speech, vocalization. The length of the vocal cords affects the pitch of voice, similar to a violin string. Open when brea ...
, which produces an acoustic waveform with many
harmonic In physics, acoustics, and telecommunications, a harmonic is a sinusoidal wave with a frequency that is a positive integer multiple of the ''fundamental frequency'' of a periodic signal. The fundamental frequency is also called the ''1st har ...
s. This initial sound is then
filter Filtration is a physical process that separates solid matter and fluid from a mixture. Filter, filtering, filters or filtration may also refer to: Science and technology Computing * Filter (higher-order function), in functional programming * Fil ...
ed by movements in the nose, mouth and throat (a complicated
resonant Resonance is a phenomenon that occurs when an object or system is subjected to an external force or vibration whose frequency matches a resonant frequency (or resonance frequency) of the system, defined as a frequency that generates a maximu ...
piping system known as the
vocal tract The vocal tract is the cavity in human bodies and in animals where the sound produced at the sound source (larynx in mammals; syrinx in birds) is filtered. In birds, it consists of the trachea, the syrinx, the oral cavity, the upper part of t ...
) to produce fluctuations in harmonic content (
formant In speech science and phonetics, a formant is the broad spectral maximum that results from an acoustic resonance of the human vocal tract. In acoustics, a formant is usually defined as a broad peak, or local maximum, in the spectrum. For harmo ...
s) in a controlled way, creating the wide variety of sounds used in speech. There is another set of sounds, known as the
unvoiced In linguistics, voicelessness is the property of sounds being pronounced without the larynx vibrating. Phonologically, it is a type of phonation, which contrasts with other states of the larynx, but some object that the word phonation implies vo ...
and
plosive In phonetics, a plosive, also known as an occlusive or simply a stop, is a pulmonic consonant in which the vocal tract is blocked so that all airflow ceases. The occlusion may be made with the tongue tip or blade (, ), tongue body (, ), lip ...
sounds, which are created or modified by a variety of sound generating disruptions of airflow occurring in the
vocal tract The vocal tract is the cavity in human bodies and in animals where the sound produced at the sound source (larynx in mammals; syrinx in birds) is filtered. In birds, it consists of the trachea, the syrinx, the oral cavity, the upper part of t ...
. The vocoder analyzes speech by measuring how its spectral energy distribution characteristics fluctuate across time. This analysis results in a set of temporally parallel Envelope (waves), envelope signals, each representing the individual frequency band amplitudes of the user's speech. Put another way, the voice signal is divided into a number of frequency bands (the larger this number, the more accurate the analysis) and the level of signal present at each frequency band, occurring simultaneously, measured by an Envelope detector, envelope follower, represents the spectral energy distribution across time. This set of envelope amplitude signals is called the Modulation, "modulator". To recreate speech, the vocoder reverses the analysis process, variably filtering an initial broadband noise (referred to alternately as the "source" or "carrier"), by passing it through a set of Band-pass filter, band-pass filters, whose individual envelope amplitude levels are controlled, in real time, by the set of analyzed envelope amplitude signals from the modulator. The digital encoding process involves a periodic analysis of each of the modulator's multiband set of filter envelope amplitudes. This analysis results in a set of digital Pulse-code modulation, pulse code modulation stream readings. Then the pulse code modulation stream outputs of each band are transmitted to a decoder. The decoder applies the pulse code modulations as control signals to corresponding amplifiers of the output filter channels. Information about the fundamental frequency of the initial voice signal (as distinct from its spectral characteristic) is discarded; it was not important to preserve this for the vocoder's original use as an encryption aid. It is this dehumanizing aspect of the vocoding process that has made it useful in creating special voice effects in popular music and audio entertainment. Instead of a point-by-point recreation of the waveform, the vocoder process sends only the parameters of the vocal model over the communication link. Since the parameters change slowly compared to the original speech waveform, the bandwidth required to transmit speech can be reduced. This allows more speech channels to utilize a given communication channel, such as a radio channel or a Submarine communications cable, submarine cable. Analog vocoders typically analyze an incoming signal by splitting the signal into multiple tuned frequency bands or ranges. To reconstruct the signal, a carrier signal is sent through a series of these tuned band-pass filters. In the example of a typical robot voice the carrier is noise or a sawtooth waveform. There are usually between 8 and 20 bands. The amplitude of the modulator for each of the individual analysis bands generates a voltage that is used to control amplifiers for each of the corresponding carrier bands. The result is that frequency components of the modulating signal are mapped onto the carrier signal as discrete amplitude changes in each of the frequency bands. Often there is an unvoiced band or sibilance channel. This is for frequencies that are outside the analysis bands for typical speech but are still important in speech. Examples are words that start with the letters ''s'', ''f'', ''ch'' or any other sibilant sound. Using this band produces recognizable speech, although somewhat mechanical sounding. Vocoders often include a second system for generating unvoiced sounds, using a noise generator instead of the fundamental frequency. This is mixed with the carrier output to increase clarity. In the channel vocoder algorithm, among the two components of an analytic signal, considering only the amplitude component and simply ignoring the instantaneous phase, phase component tends to result in an unclear voice; on methods for rectifying this, see phase vocoder.


History

The development of a vocoder was started in 1928 by
Bell Labs Nokia Bell Labs, commonly referred to as ''Bell Labs'', is an American industrial research and development company owned by Finnish technology company Nokia. With headquarters located in Murray Hill, New Jersey, Murray Hill, New Jersey, the compa ...
engineer
Homer Dudley Homer W. Dudley (14 November 1896 – 18 September 1980) was an American pioneering electronic and acoustic engineer who created the first electronic voice synthesizer for Bell Labs in the 1930s and led the development of a method of sending secu ...
, who was granted patents for it on March 21, 1939, (filed October 30, 1935) and Nov 16, 1937. To demonstrate the speech synthesis ability of its decoder section, the
voder 400px, Schematic circuit of the VODER The Bell Telephone Laboratory's Voder (abbreviation of Voice Operating Demonstrator) was the first attempt to electronically synthesize human speech by breaking it down into its acoustic components. It was ...
(voice operating demonstrator) was introduced to the public at the AT&T building at the 1939–1940 New York World's Fair. The voder consisted of an electronic oscillator a sound source of pitch (sound), pitched tone and noise generator for noise (audio), hiss, a 10-band band-pass filter, resonator filters with variable-gain amplifiers as a
vocal tract The vocal tract is the cavity in human bodies and in animals where the sound produced at the sound source (larynx in mammals; syrinx in birds) is filtered. In birds, it consists of the trachea, the syrinx, the oral cavity, the upper part of t ...
, and the manual controllers including a set of pressure-sensitive keys for filter control, and a Expression pedal, foot pedal for pitch control of tone. Based on (Se
schematic diagram of the Voder synthesizer
)
The filters controlled by keys convert the tone and the hiss into vowels, consonants, and inflections. This was a complex machine to operate, but a skilled operator could produce recognizable speech. A demonstration of the
voder 400px, Schematic circuit of the VODER The Bell Telephone Laboratory's Voder (abbreviation of Voice Operating Demonstrator) was the first attempt to electronically synthesize human speech by breaking it down into its acoustic components. It was ...
(not the vocoder).
Dudley's vocoder was used in the SIGSALY system, which was built by Bell Labs engineers in 1943. SIGSALY was used for encrypted voice communications during World War II. The KO-6 voice coder was released in 1949 in limited quantities; it was a close approximation to the SIGSALY at . In 1953, KY-9 THESEUS voice coder used solid-state logic to reduce the weight to from SIGSALY's , and in 1961 the HY-2 voice coder, a 16-channel system, weighed and was the last implementation of a channel vocoder in a secure speech system. Later work in this field has since used digital
speech coding Speech coding is an application of data compression to digital audio signals containing speech. Speech coding uses speech-specific parameter estimation using audio signal processing techniques to model the speech signal, combined with generic da ...
. The most widely used speech coding technique is linear predictive coding (LPC). Another speech coding technique, adaptive differential pulse-code modulation (ADPCM), was developed by P. Cummiskey, Nikil Jayant, Nikil S. Jayant and James L. Flanagan at Bell Labs in 1973.


Applications

* Terminal equipment for systems based on digital mobile radio (DMR). * Digital voice scrambling and encryption * Cochlear implants: noise and tone vocoding is used to simulate the effects of cochlear implants. * Musical and other artistic effects


Modern implementations

Even with the need to record several frequencies, and additional unvoiced sounds, the compression of vocoder systems is impressive. Standard speech-recording systems capture frequencies from about 500 to 3,400 Hz, where most of the frequencies used in speech lie, typically using a sampling rate of 8 kHz (slightly greater than the Nyquist rate). The sampling resolution is typically 8 or more bits per sample resolution, for a data rate in the range of , but a good vocoder can provide a reasonably good simulation of voice with as little as of data. ''Toll quality'' voice coders, such as ITU G.729, are used in many telephone networks. G.729 in particular has a final data rate of with superb voice quality. G.723 achieves slightly worse quality at data rates of 5.3 and . Many voice vocoder systems use lower data rates, but below voice quality begins to drop rapidly. Several vocoder systems are used in NSA encryption systems: * LPC-10, Federal Information Processing Standard, FIPS Pub 137, , which uses linear predictive coding * Code-excited linear prediction (CELP), 2400 and , Federal Standard 1016, used in STU-III * Continuously variable slope delta modulation (CVSD), , used in wide band encryptors such as the KY-57. * Mixed-excitation linear prediction (MELP), MIL STD 3005, , used in the Future Narrowband Digital Terminal FNBDT, NSA's 21st century secure telephone. * Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM), former ITU-T G.721, used in Secure Terminal Equipment, STE secure telephone Modern vocoders that are used in communication equipment and in voice storage devices today are based on the following algorithms: * Algebraic code-excited linear prediction (ACELP 4.7–24 kbit/s) * Mixed-excitation linear prediction (MELPe 2400, 1200 and ) * Multi-band excitation (AMBE  – ) * Sinusoidal-Pulsed Representation (SPR  – ) * Robust Advanced Low-complexity Waveform Interpolation (RALCWI 2050, 2400 and ) * Tri-Wave Excited Linear Prediction (TWELP 300–9600 bit/s) * Noise Robust Vocoder (NRV 300 and ) Vocoders are also currently used in psychophysics, linguistics, computational neuroscience and cochlear implant research.


Linear prediction-based

Since the late 1970s, most non-musical vocoders have been implemented using linear prediction, whereby the target signal's spectral envelope (formant) is estimated by an all-pole Infinite impulse response, IIR digital filter, filter. In linear prediction coding, the all-pole filter replaces the bandpass filter bank of its predecessor and is used at the encoder to ''whiten'' the signal (i.e., flatten the spectrum) and again at the decoder to re-apply the spectral shape of the target speech signal. One advantage of this type of filtering is that the location of the linear predictor's spectral peaks is entirely determined by the target signal, and can be as precise as allowed by the time period to be filtered. This is in contrast with vocoders realized using fixed-width filter banks, where the location of spectral peaks is constrained by the available fixed frequency bands. LP filtering also has disadvantages in that signals with a large number of constituent frequencies may exceed the number of frequencies that can be represented by the linear prediction filter. This restriction is the primary reason that LP coding is almost always used in tandem with other methods in high-compression voice coders.


Waveform-interpolative

Waveform-interpolative (WI) vocoder was developed at AT&T Bell Laboratories around 1995 by W.B. Kleijn, and subsequently, a low- complexity version was developed by AT&T for the DoD secure vocoder competition. Notable enhancements to the WI coder were made at the University of California, Santa Barbara. AT&T holds the core patents related to WI and other institutes hold additional patents.


Artistic effects


Uses in music

For musical applications, a source of musical sounds is used as the carrier, instead of extracting the fundamental frequency. For instance, one could use the sound of a synthesizer as the input to the filter bank, a technique that became popular in the 1970s.


History

Werner Meyer-Eppler, a German scientist with a special interest in electronic voice synthesis, published a thesis in 1948 on electronic music and speech synthesis from the viewpoint of sound synthesis. Later he was instrumental in the founding of the Studio for Electronic Music (WDR), Studio for Electronic Music of Westdeutscher Rundfunk, WDR in Cologne, in 1951. One of the first attempts to use a vocoder in creating music was the ''Siemens Synthesizer'' at the Siemens Studio for Electronic Music, developed between 1956 and 1959. (See also excerpt of pp
157

160
from th
3rd edition in 2008
())
  Details of the Siemens Electronic Music Studio, exhibited at the Deutsches Museum. In 1968, Robert Moog developed one of the first Solid state (electronics), solid-state musical vocoders for the electronic music studio of the University at Buffalo. In 1968, Bruce Haack built a prototype vocoder, named ''Farad'' after Michael Faraday. It was first featured on "The Electronic Record For Children" released in 1969 and then on his rock album ''The Electric Lucifer'' released in 1970.   A sample of earlier Vocoder. Vocoder effects have been used by musicians in both electronic music and as a special effect along with more traditional instruments. In 1969, Sly and the Family Stone used it in "Sex Machine", a song on the album ''Stand!''. Other artists who have made vocoders an essential part of their music, overall or during an extended phase. Examples include the German synthpop group Kraftwerk, the Japanese New wave music, new wave group Polysics, Stevie Wonder ("Send One Your Love", "A Seed's a Star") and jazz/fusion keyboardist Herbie Hancock during his late 1970s period. In 1982 Neil Young used a Sennheiser Vocoder VSM201 on six of the nine tracks on ''Trans (album), Trans''. The chorus and bridge of Michael Jackson's "P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)". features a vocoder ("Pretty young thing/You make me sing"), courtesy of session musician Michael Boddicker. Among the most consistent users of the vocoder in emulating the human voice are Daft Punk, who have used this instrument from their first album ''Homework (Daft Punk album), Homework'' (1997) to their latest work ''Random Access Memories'' (2013) and consider the convergence of technological and human voice "the identity of their musical project". For instance, the lyrics of "Around the World (Daft Punk song), Around the World" (1997) are integrally vocoder-processed, "Get Lucky (Daft Punk song), Get Lucky" (2013) features a mix of natural and processed human voices, and "Instant Crush" (2013) features Julian Casablancas singing into a vocoder.


Voice effects in other arts

Robot voices became a recurring element in popular music during the 20th century. Apart from vocoders, several other methods of producing variations on this effect include: the Sonovox, Talk box, Auto-Tune, linear prediction vocoders, speech synthesis, ring modulation and comb filter. Vocoders are used in television production, filmmaking and games, usually for robots or talking computers. The robot voices of the Cylon (1978), Cylons in ''Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series), Battlestar Galactica'' were created with an EMS Vocoder 2000. The Doctor Who theme#History, 1980 version of the ''Doctor Who'' theme, as arranged and recorded by Peter Howell (musician), Peter Howell, has a section of the main melody generated by a Roland SVC-350 vocoder. A similar Roland VP-330 vocoder was used to create the voice of Soundwave (Transformers), Soundwave, a character from the ''Transformers'' series.


See also

* Audio time stretching and pitch scaling * List of vocoders * Silent speech interface


Notes


References

;Multimedia references


External links

*
Description, photographs, and diagram for the vocoder at 120years.net



Object of Interest: The Vocoder The New Yorker Magazine mini documentary
{{Authority control Audio effects Electronic musical instruments Music hardware Lossy compression algorithms Speech codecs Robotics engineering