Auralization of a car pass-by inside an urban canyon using measured impulse responses

Development of methodologies for the auralization of moving cars can be of great value for a virtual acoustic experience of urban areas. In this paper11Parts of this study were presented at the conference: Euronoise 2018, Crete, Greece a methodology for the auralization of car pass-by based on measu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied acoustics 2021-12, Vol.183, p.108291, Article 108291
Hauptverfasser: Georgiou, Fotis, Hornikx, Maarten, Kohlrausch, Armin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Development of methodologies for the auralization of moving cars can be of great value for a virtual acoustic experience of urban areas. In this paper11Parts of this study were presented at the conference: Euronoise 2018, Crete, Greece a methodology for the auralization of car pass-by based on measured binaural impulse responses (BIRs) is presented. Measured BIRs for different locations in a street canyon were convolved with dry synthesized car signals in which cross-fade windows were applied in order to create a smooth transition between the source positions. Next, the convolved signals are summed in order to create the final car pass-by auralizations. A same/different listening test was carried out in order to investigate if increasing the angular spacing between the discrete source positions affects the perception of the auralizations. The experiments revealed that the auralizations with a larger angular increment (up to 16∘) are perceptually different to the reference auralizations (2∘ spacing), even in the case where the increment increased by only 2∘ compared to the reference. Compared to previous listening experiments of a car pass-by in the scenario without buildings it was shown that the discrimination performance of the subjects was significantly better compared to the test conditions where buildings are absent, where subjects found it very difficult to distinguish differences between auralizations of larger and smaller increment.
ISSN:0003-682X
1872-910X
DOI:10.1016/j.apacoust.2021.108291