How to pass a audio signal through a filter

137 views (last 30 days)
How to pass a audio signal through a filter ? It should work based on spectral energy i.e if its between 0-4 kHz it falls on speech band and If it falls between 4 kHz-8 kHz then it comes under noise band.Now the VOS(voice operated switch) should be activated if the signal is in speech band and it should be deactivated when it is in noise band. Can some one help me on this problem.
  2 Comments
Jan
Jan on 18 Feb 2013
Please explain, what you have tried so far and which problems occurred. Suggesting improvements is much easier than solving your problem completely from scratch.
Gokul
Gokul on 18 Feb 2013
I am a beginner and i need some ideas to start up with.So can u please help on how to get start with it.

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Carlos
Carlos on 18 Feb 2013
The first step is to design a filter to obtain the A and B vector coefficients.Then use the Butter function, for instance to obtain your signal(type Butter in your Matlab command window and you will find many other type of filters). Once you have obtained the B and A vector coefficients you can filter your signal using the function filter.
y=filter(x,A,B) x(is your input signal) and y your filtered signal.
Once you have filtered the signal you can calculate the spectral energy before and after filtering to find out if the filter has removed a significant part of your signal.
  4 Comments
Odrisso
Odrisso on 14 Nov 2014
Hi Carlos. I have aquestion on your code. Why you choose 6 in the line: [b,a]=butter(6,wn);
Please let me know.
Sai Manas  D C
Sai Manas D C on 1 Jul 2020

6 is the order of filter, it can be any real integer. Greater the order of filter it's response approaches nearer to ideal characteristics

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (5)

Carlos
Carlos on 18 Feb 2013
This is fine at the moment. Now filter with from 0 to 4000Hz to make sure the results are different(I mean if you filter from 4000 to 8000Hz and the signal after filtering is the same, then filter in the 0 to 4000Hz band to make sure the signal changes in this case).
  6 Comments
Darsana P M
Darsana P M on 16 Mar 2017
If i want to divide the given audio signals into different frequencies ie 20-30 Hz, 30-40Hz and so on. What should i do?
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 16 Mar 2017
You could construct a collection of band-pass filters that you pass the same data through.

Sign in to comment.


dev sanghvi
dev sanghvi on 24 May 2016
you can check my video.
https://youtu.be/ZPNOgLwfjNc

Sanjay  Gupta
Sanjay Gupta on 2 Mar 2017
what is the significance of "wn" in the code?
  1 Comment
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 2 Mar 2017
wn is the cutoff frequency, specified as a value between 0 and 1 where 1 is the Nyquist frequency. This proportion of nyquist frequency is commonly used in filter specification, because it makes the filter calculations themselves independent of frequency.

Sign in to comment.


Zahraa Almousawi
Zahraa Almousawi on 18 Oct 2017
if i have impulse response and i convoluted it with a sound and the sound become so noisy how can i filter it after the convolution function? i really need a help!

saikiran Puranam
saikiran Puranam on 6 May 2020
Can you please provide me a Matlab code for "Human Voice filtering with Band-stop filter design " Using the functions of MATLAB R2020a.

Categories

Find more on Audio Processing Algorithm Design in Help Center and File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!