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Respuesta al Impulso de Sala×Trazado de rayos acústicos×Conformación de Haces (Beamforming)×
CampoAcústicaAcústicaAcústica
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen196519791988
Autor originalManfred SchroederJames Allen, David BerkleyVan Veen, Barry Buckley
TipoMeasurement pipeline for room acousticsComputational room acoustics methodDirectional audio array processing
Fuente seminalSchroeder, M. R. (1965). New method of measuring reverberation time. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 37(6), 409–412. DOI ↗Allen, J. B., & Berkley, D. A. (1979). Image method for efficiently simulating small-room acoustics. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 65(4), 943–950. DOI ↗Van Veen, B. D., & Buckley, K. M. (1988). Beamforming: A versatile approach to spatial filtering. IEEE ASSP Magazine, 5(2), 4–24. DOI ↗
AliasRIR, impulse response measurementray tracing, geometric acoustics, image source method, sound ray propagationbeamformer, spatial filtering, microphone array, phased array
Relacionados555
ResumenThe Room Impulse Response (RIR) is a measure of how a physical space (room) affects acoustic signals propagating through it. First formalized by Manfred Schroeder in 1965, RIR captures the complete acoustic character of a space by measuring the system response to an impulsive sound source. It is fundamental to characterizing room acoustics, designing audio systems, and modeling spatial audio effects.Acoustic ray tracing is a computational technique for predicting sound propagation in rooms by treating acoustic energy as rays that reflect specularly off surfaces. Formalized by Allen and Berkley in 1979 via the image source method, ray tracing is one of the most computationally efficient methods for room acoustic simulation, especially for early and mid-reflections. It is widely used in audio engineering, architectural acoustics, and interactive spatial audio for virtual environments.Beamforming is a spatial signal processing technique that uses microphone arrays to selectively enhance sound from a desired direction while suppressing sounds from other directions. Formalized by Van Veen and Buckley in 1988, beamforming is fundamental to hands-free speech communication, hearing aids, sonar, radar, and spatial audio recording. It enables 'listening' with directional sensitivity despite using omnidirectional microphones, by exploiting time delays and phase differences between array elements.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Room Impulse Response · Acoustic Ray Tracing · Beamforming. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare