Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond

A central theme of this thesis is using echoes to achieve useful, interesting, and sometimes surprising results. One should have no doubts about the echoes' constructive potential; it is, after all, demonstrated masterfully by Nature. Just think about the bat's intriguing ability to naviga...

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Main Author: Dokmanić, Ivan
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Lausanne, EPFL 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779/files/EPFL_TH6623.pdf
http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779
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spelling ftinfoscience:oai:infoscience.tind.io:208779 2023-05-15T18:33:33+02:00 Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond Dokmanić, Ivan 2015-06-02T12:35:12Z https://doi.org/10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623 https://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779/files/EPFL_TH6623.pdf http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779 eng eng Lausanne, EPFL doi:10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623 urn:urn:nbn:ch:bel-epfl-thesis6623-3 nebis:10446561 https://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779/files/EPFL_TH6623.pdf http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779 http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779 Text 2015 ftinfoscience https://doi.org/10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623 2023-02-13T22:27:17Z A central theme of this thesis is using echoes to achieve useful, interesting, and sometimes surprising results. One should have no doubts about the echoes' constructive potential; it is, after all, demonstrated masterfully by Nature. Just think about the bat's intriguing ability to navigate in unknown spaces and hunt for insects by listening to echoes of its calls, or about similar (albeit less well-known) abilities of toothed whales, some birds, shrews, and ultimately people. We show that, perhaps contrary to conventional wisdom, multipath propagation resulting from echoes is our friend. When we think about it the right way, it reveals essential geometric information about the sources--channel--receivers system. The key idea is to think of echoes as being more than just delayed and attenuated peaks in 1D impulse responses; they are actually additional sources with their corresponding 3D locations. This transformation allows us to forget about the abstract \emph{room}, and to replace it by more familiar \emph{point sets}. We can then engage the powerful machinery of Euclidean distance geometry. A problem that always arises is that we do not know \emph{a priori} the matching between the peaks and the points in space, and solving the inverse problem is achieved by \emph{echo sorting}---a tool we developed for learning correct labelings of echoes. This has applications beyond acoustics, whenever one deals with waves and reflections, or more generally, time-of-flight measurements. Equipped with this perspective, we first address the ``Can one hear the shape of a room?'' question, and we answer it with a qualified ``yes''. Even a single impulse response uniquely describes a convex polyhedral room, whereas a more practical algorithm to reconstruct the room's geometry uses only first-order echoes and a few microphones. Next, we show how different problems of localization benefit from echoes. The first one is multiple indoor sound source localization. Assuming the room is known, we show that discretizing the Helmholtz ... Text toothed whales EPFL Infoscience (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale Lausanne)
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language English
description A central theme of this thesis is using echoes to achieve useful, interesting, and sometimes surprising results. One should have no doubts about the echoes' constructive potential; it is, after all, demonstrated masterfully by Nature. Just think about the bat's intriguing ability to navigate in unknown spaces and hunt for insects by listening to echoes of its calls, or about similar (albeit less well-known) abilities of toothed whales, some birds, shrews, and ultimately people. We show that, perhaps contrary to conventional wisdom, multipath propagation resulting from echoes is our friend. When we think about it the right way, it reveals essential geometric information about the sources--channel--receivers system. The key idea is to think of echoes as being more than just delayed and attenuated peaks in 1D impulse responses; they are actually additional sources with their corresponding 3D locations. This transformation allows us to forget about the abstract \emph{room}, and to replace it by more familiar \emph{point sets}. We can then engage the powerful machinery of Euclidean distance geometry. A problem that always arises is that we do not know \emph{a priori} the matching between the peaks and the points in space, and solving the inverse problem is achieved by \emph{echo sorting}---a tool we developed for learning correct labelings of echoes. This has applications beyond acoustics, whenever one deals with waves and reflections, or more generally, time-of-flight measurements. Equipped with this perspective, we first address the ``Can one hear the shape of a room?'' question, and we answer it with a qualified ``yes''. Even a single impulse response uniquely describes a convex polyhedral room, whereas a more practical algorithm to reconstruct the room's geometry uses only first-order echoes and a few microphones. Next, we show how different problems of localization benefit from echoes. The first one is multiple indoor sound source localization. Assuming the room is known, we show that discretizing the Helmholtz ...
format Text
author Dokmanić, Ivan
spellingShingle Dokmanić, Ivan
Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
author_facet Dokmanić, Ivan
author_sort Dokmanić, Ivan
title Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
title_short Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
title_full Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
title_fullStr Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
title_full_unstemmed Listening to Distances and Hearing Shapes:Inverse Problems in Room Acoustics and Beyond
title_sort listening to distances and hearing shapes:inverse problems in room acoustics and beyond
publisher Lausanne, EPFL
publishDate 2015
url https://doi.org/10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779/files/EPFL_TH6623.pdf
http://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/208779
genre toothed whales
genre_facet toothed whales
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op_relation doi:10.5075/epfl-thesis-6623
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