Echo return loss – Polycom C16 User Manual

Page 477

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Designing Audio Conferencing Systems

B - 15

may occur in the data as it is transmitted through the network. It is not

uncommon for networks to require a hundred milliseconds or more to transfer

audio from one site to the other.

While the delay in the network will increase the perception of echoes, it does

not affect the performance of the acoustic echo canceller in either the local or

remote rooms. The acoustic echo canceller is concerned only with the audio as

it enters the room and reflected in the room and picked up again by the local

microphones. It doesn't matter to the echo canceller whether the signal from

the remote talkers takes 1 millisecond or 10 hours to be received - the local echo

canceller is only concerned with the audio once it reaches the acoustic echo

canceller and picked up by the local microphones. It is only the perception of

residual echoes that is influenced by the transmission delay. For instance an

echo that is heard with 5 msec of delay will not be objectionable at all, while

the same echo heard with 500 msec delay will render interactive

communications impossible.

Echo Return Loss

An echo canceller's performance is measured by how well it can reduce the

echo signal that is present at the microphone. The natural reduction of the echo

signal due to the physical separation of the loudspeakers from the

microphones is commonly referred to as echo return loss (ERL) and is

measured in dB. As shown in the following figure ERL is the ratio of 10

Log(A/B) where A is the signal that is sent to the loudspeaker amplifier, and

B is the signal picked up by the microphone. It is common for echo cancellers

to have a minimum required ERL for proper operation - exceeding the

required ERL will slow or prevent the acoustic echo canceller from properly

converging. Typical values for ERL are 0 - 10 dB with 0 dB characterizing a

more robust echo canceller than one that requires 10 dB of ERL for proper

operation.
While the ERL reduces the amount of echo present at the microphones, there

will still be a significant amount of echo that will be sent to the remote site if

there is no further processing on the signal. The enhancement of the echo

return loss due to the presence of an acoustic echo canceller is referred to as the

echo return loss enhancement or ERLE. In the following figure, the ERLE

AEC

Lo

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l Ro

om

AE

C

Rem

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Roo

m

Delay

Delay

Remote Room

Am

p

Local Room

Am

p

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This manual is related to the following products:

C8, SR12, C12