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3-D References
3-D Sound References
The following references provide a good set of entry points for the printed
literature on spatial audio. Additional useful information can be found
from links
to spatial audio on the World Wide Web.
- Begault, D. (1994). 3-D Sound for Virtual
Reality and Multimedia (Academic Press, Boston, MA, 1994). A clear
and comprehensive presentation of 3-D audio principles and current technology.
- Berg, R. E. and D. G. Stork (1982). The
Physics of Sound (Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ). An inviting
exposition of acoustics with a minimum of mathematics.
- Blauert, J. (1983). Spatial Hearing
(MIT Press, Cambridge, MA). The standard reference on the psychophysics
of three-dimensional hearing.
- Bracewell, R. N. (1986). The Fourier
Transform and its Applications, 2nd ed. (McGraw-Hill, New York).
A standard reference for Fourier analysis.
- Brown, C. P. (1996). "Modeling the Elevation
Characteristics of the Head-Related Impulse Response," Technical Report
No. 13, NSF Grant No. IRI-9402246, Dept. of Elec. Engr., San Jose State
Univ., San Jose, CA. Develops an accurate and efficient DSP model.
- Carlile, Simon (1996). Virtual Auditory
Space: Generation and Applications (Chapman and Hall, New York. Contains
outstanding chapters surveying the physics and psychophysics of 3-D auditory
perception and the synthesis of spatial sound.
- Duda, R. O. (1993). "Modeling head related
transfer functions," in Proc. Twenty-Seventh Annual Asilomar
Conference on Signals, Systems and Computers (Asilomar, CA). Briefly
surveys the major approaches used to date.
- Genuit, K. (1984). "A model for the description
of outer-ear transmission characteristics," Doctor of Engineeing dissertation
(in German), Rheinish-Westphalian Technical University, Aachen, Germany.
An ambitious attempt to develop signal-processing models of head-related
transfer functions from head- and outer-ear geometry. Some of the concepts
are incorporated in the binaural mixing console manufactured by Head Acoustics.
- Han, H. L. (1994). "Measuring a dummy head
in search of pinna cues," J. Audio Eng. Soc., Vol. 42,
Nos. 1/2, pp. 15-37, January. One of several studies of the nature of the
elevation cues produced by the pinna.
- Handel, S. (1989). Listening (MIT
Press, Cambridge, MA). A recommended introductory textbook on the psychology
of hearing; includes non-mathematical chapters on the physics of sound production,
propagation and diffraction, plus a lucid chapter on auditory neurophysiology.
- Mills, A. W. (1972). "Auditory localization,"
in J. V. Tobias, Ed., Foundations of Modern Auditory Theory, Vol.
II, pp. 303-348 (Academic Press, NY). An excellent summary of the
mechanisms and psychoacoustic cues for sound localization.
- Morse, P. M. and K. U. Ingard (1968). Theoretical
Acoustics (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ). An advanced
but very clear textbook on the physics of sound.
- Oppenheim, A. V. and R. W. Schafer (1989).
Discrete-Time Signal Processing (Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs,
NJ). A standard and widely respected textbook on digital signal processing
(DSP).
- Steiglitz, K. (1996). A Digital Signal
Processing Primer (Addison-Wesley, Menlo Park, CA). A clear introduction
to DSP, particularly suitable for audio applications.
- Wright, M. (1996). "3-D Audio: Above and
behind you or moving low left to right," EDN, pp. 87-88,90,92,94,96,99, June. A trade publication that accurately summarizes current commercialproducts and technical trends.
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3-D Audio
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