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BEM Acoustics×Holografia Acústica×Mascaramento Psicoacústico×
ÁreaAcústicaAcústicaAcústica
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem197119851961
Autor originalCarlos Brebbia, Robert ButterfieldJames Maynard, Earl Williams, Yongjian LeeEberhard Zwicker
TipoComputational simulation for acousticsSound field reconstruction methodPerceptual model for audio systems
Fonte seminalBurton, A. J., & Miller, G. F. (1971). The application of integral equation methods to the numerical solution of some exterior boundary-value problems. Proceedings of the Royal Society A, 323(1553), 201–210. DOI ↗Maynard, J. D., Williams, E. G., & Lee, Y. (1985). Near-field acoustic holography: I. Theory of generalized holography and the development of NAH. Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 78(4), 1395–1413. link ↗Zwicker, E., & Scharf, B. (1965). Psychoacoustics: Facts and Models. Springer-Verlag. ISBN: 978-3540631644
Outros nomesBEM, boundary element method, indirect BEM, direct BEMNAH, near-field acoustics, sound field mapping, acoustic imagingmasking, temporal masking, frequency masking, auditory masking
Relacionados555
ResumoThe Boundary Element Method (BEM) is a numerical technique for solving acoustic wave equations in complex geometries. Unlike finite element methods (FEM) that mesh entire volumes, BEM discretizes only the acoustic boundaries (surfaces), reducing computational cost and memory. First applied to acoustics by Burton and Miller in 1971, BEM is widely used for predicting room acoustics, exterior noise radiation, and acoustic scattering without the need for volumetric meshing.Near-Field Acoustic Holography (NAH) is a technique for reconstructing 3D acoustic sound fields and visualizing sound radiation from sources by measuring pressure at a dense microphone array in the near field. Pioneered by Maynard, Williams, and Lee in 1985, NAH extends holographic principles from optics to acoustics, enabling detailed acoustic source characterization, noise source identification, and acoustic field visualization that is impossible with conventional single-point or line-array methods.Psychoacoustic masking describes how the human auditory system suppresses the perception of weak sounds in the presence of stronger sounds. Formalized by Eberhard Zwicker in the 1960s, masking is a fundamental phenomenon in hearing and the basis for perceptual audio coding (MP3, AAC, OPUS). Masking occurs both in frequency (spectral masking) and time (temporal masking), and understanding these effects enables efficient audio compression and realistic sound design.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: BEM Acoustics · Acoustic Holography · Psychoacoustic Masking. Recuperado em 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare