SCENIC - Self-configuring environment-aware intelligent acoustic sensing

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Responsible:
EU Research FP7
DEIB Role: Coordinator
Start date: 2009-01-01
Length: 36 months
Project abstract
SCENIC - Self-Configuring Intelligent Environment-aware acoustic sensing - is a new FET (Future and Emerging Technologies) project, funded by the Seventh Framework Program of the European Community in the ICT area.
Promoted and coordinated by the Politecnico di Milano, the project started on January 1, 2009, and involves the Friedrich-Alexander Universitaet Erlangen-Nuernberg in Germany, the Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine of London, and the Fondazione Bruno Kessler in Trento, Italy.
Most advanced sound processing applications, particularly those based on array processing, are critically sensitive to the environment's acoustic response because their design does not account for the complex propagation phenomena that cause it. Reverberations are usually seen as a liability to take countermeasures against, while nature teaches us that the information provided by the acoustic interaction with the environment can become a valuable asset that enables complex navigational tasks and more. Turning the acoustic response from a liability into an asset requires a thorough understanding of propagation phenomena, and an accurate acoustic modelling of the environment. This can be done by listening to how the environment renders controlled sound emissions, as long as such emission exhibits a temporal as well as a spatial "structure".
The SCENIC project is aimed at developing a comprehensive set of methodologies and analysis tools that will enable acoustic systems to become aware of their own characteristics and geometry and those of the environment that they operate in, and will enable advanced space-time processing solutions to take advantage of the additional information provided by the environment's acoustic response. One key point of the project is in the fact that, in order to achieve this status of awareness, sensors and sources will be used together in a synergistic fashion, while keeping into account requirements of flexibility, cost and real-time operation.
The research will focus on three directions, two “global approaches” based on acoustic wave-field decomposition (modal and geometric) and a “local approach” based on a point-to-point representation (channel identification). The joint use of such methodologies in space-time acoustic processing will pave the way to novel applications that go beyond what is currently possible today.
Promoted and coordinated by the Politecnico di Milano, the project started on January 1, 2009, and involves the Friedrich-Alexander Universitaet Erlangen-Nuernberg in Germany, the Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine of London, and the Fondazione Bruno Kessler in Trento, Italy.
Most advanced sound processing applications, particularly those based on array processing, are critically sensitive to the environment's acoustic response because their design does not account for the complex propagation phenomena that cause it. Reverberations are usually seen as a liability to take countermeasures against, while nature teaches us that the information provided by the acoustic interaction with the environment can become a valuable asset that enables complex navigational tasks and more. Turning the acoustic response from a liability into an asset requires a thorough understanding of propagation phenomena, and an accurate acoustic modelling of the environment. This can be done by listening to how the environment renders controlled sound emissions, as long as such emission exhibits a temporal as well as a spatial "structure".
The SCENIC project is aimed at developing a comprehensive set of methodologies and analysis tools that will enable acoustic systems to become aware of their own characteristics and geometry and those of the environment that they operate in, and will enable advanced space-time processing solutions to take advantage of the additional information provided by the environment's acoustic response. One key point of the project is in the fact that, in order to achieve this status of awareness, sensors and sources will be used together in a synergistic fashion, while keeping into account requirements of flexibility, cost and real-time operation.
The research will focus on three directions, two “global approaches” based on acoustic wave-field decomposition (modal and geometric) and a “local approach” based on a point-to-point representation (channel identification). The joint use of such methodologies in space-time acoustic processing will pave the way to novel applications that go beyond what is currently possible today.
Project results
Among the first new results brought by the project is a system based on a microphone and a moving loudspeaker, which is able to swiftly reconstruct the geometry of an enclosed environment; as well as new solutions for altering the acoustics of an environment by means of hidden speaker arrays.