Audio Fingerprinting
Audio fingerprinting is a technique for creating a compact, robust identifier (fingerprint) for audio recordings that uniquely represents the content while being tolerant to modifications such as compression, noise, or time-shifting. Introduced by Haitsma and Kalker (2002), it underlies music identification services like Shazam and is critical for copyright enforcement, music matching, and library deduplication. A fingerprint is not a waveform hash; it captures perceptual content and remains stable across reasonable audio alterations.
Rekod sumber
Petikan disalin secara verbatim daripada rekod sumber kaedah. Tiada pengesahan peringkat tuntutan disimpulkan daripadanya.
- Haitsma, J., & Kalker, T. (2002). A highly robust audio fingerprinting system. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Music Information Retrieval. · URL
- Wang, A. L. (2003). An industrial-strength audio search algorithm. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Music Information Retrieval. · URL
- Cano, P., Batlle, E., Kalker, T., & Haitsma, J. (2005). A review of audio fingerprinting. Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, 53(9), 804-825. · URL
Tuntutan yang dikurasi
Tuntutan disimpan dalam lejar bukti, setiap satu dengan penilaiannya sendiri.
Pandangan ini tidak mencipta penilaian tuntutan apabila lejar tiada.
Kaedah berkaitan
Dijana daripada graf kaedah dan ditunjukkan sebagai perhubungan yang dicadangkan mesin — tiada tuntutan bukti disimpulkan.