A Free-Source Method (FrSM) for Calibrating a Large-Aperture Microphone Array

Large-aperture microphone arrays can be used to capture and enhance speech from individual talkers in noisy, multi-talker, and reverberant environments. However, they must be calibrated, often more than once, to obtain accurate 3-dimensional coordinates for all microphones. Direct-measurement techni...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on audio, speech, and language processing Vol. 21; no. 8; pp. 1632 - 1639
Main Authors Khanal, S., Silverman, H. F., Shakya, R. R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Piscataway, NJ IEEE 01.08.2013
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Large-aperture microphone arrays can be used to capture and enhance speech from individual talkers in noisy, multi-talker, and reverberant environments. However, they must be calibrated, often more than once, to obtain accurate 3-dimensional coordinates for all microphones. Direct-measurement techniques, such as using a measuring tape or a laser-based tool are cumbersome and time-consuming. Some previous methods that used acoustic signals for array calibration required bulky hardware and/or fixed, known source locations. Others, which allowed more flexible source placement, often have issues with real data, have reported results for 2D only, or work only for small arrays. This paper describes a complete and robust method for automatic calibration using acoustic signals which is simple, repeatable, accurate, and has been shown to work for a real system. The method requires only a single transducer (speaker) with a microphone attached above its center. The unit is freely moved around the focal volume of the microphone array generating a single long recording from all the microphones. After that, the system is completely automatic. We describe the free source method (FrSM), validate its effectiveness and present accuracy results against measured ground truth. The performance of FrSM is compared to that from several other methods for a real 128-microphone array.
ISSN:1558-7916
1558-7924
DOI:10.1109/TASL.2013.2256896