Bau, David Christopher; Himmelein, Hendrik Gregor; Lambert, Jannik; Lübeck, Tim; Pörschmann, Christoph:
Investigating the Plausibility of Spatially Interpolated Binaural Room Impulse Responses
AES 5th International Conference on Audio for Virtual and Augmented Reality
In: Proceedings of the AES Conference on Audio for Virtual and Augmented Reality / Audio Engineering Society (Eds.). - AES International Conference on Audio for Virtual and Augmented Reality; Redmond, WA; August, 19 - 21, 2024 - New York: Audio Engineering Society, 2024
2024Essay (Conference) in Conference proceedings
Faculty of Information, Media and Electrical Engineering » Institute of Computer and Communication Technology
Title:
Investigating the Plausibility of Spatially Interpolated Binaural Room Impulse Responses
Conference
AES 5th International Conference on Audio for Virtual and Augmented Reality
Author:
Bau, David ChristopherTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0003477
SCOPUS
57219591917
Other
person connected with TH Köln
corresponding author
;
Himmelein, Hendrik GregorTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0020015
SCOPUS
58198859500
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Lambert, Jannik;Lübeck, TimTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0002622
ORCID
0000-0003-2870-095XORCID iD
SCOPUS
57209472602
Other
person connected with TH Köln
;
Pörschmann, ChristophTH Köln
DHSB-ID
THK0001486
ORCID
0000-0003-0794-0444ORCID iD
SCOPUS
6507379026
Other
person connected with TH Köln
Year of publication:
2024
Extent:
10 Seiten
Scopus ID
Note:
Conference Paper 9
Language of text:
English
Keyword, Topic:
Technische Akustik
Type of resource:
Text
Practice Partner:
No
Category:
Research
Part of statistic:
Part of statistic

Abstract in English:

Rendering virtual acoustic environments with measured binaural room impulse responses (BRIRs) can provide a high level of realism. However, the measurement of BRIRs for multiple head orientations is typically tedious. Appropriate interpolation techniques can lower the demand for spatial resolution and thus reduce the measurement effort. A recent study compared several non-parametric interpolation strategies for very sparse multi-orientational BRIRs. The results suggest a high overall quality for BRIRs interpolated from sparse sets with angular resolutions of 30? and 40?. The present study investigates the realism of such sparsely measured BRIR sets for mixed reality (XR) applications compared to densely measured BRIRs in a plausibility experiment. The participants had to decide if a presented sound source was a real loudspeaker or a headphone simulation, only using their listening expectations as a inner reference. The results indicate that participants could not reliably identify the simulations for either dense or interpolated BRIRs. For dense BRIRs, participants responses were essentially random, suggesting they were guessing. For interpolated BRIRs, results indicate that participants were able to detect small sensory differences.