Adobe AUDITION 1.5 User Manual

Page 295

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ADOBE AUDITION 1.5

User Guide

S

S/N ratio

Signal-to-noise ratio describes the difference between the highest signal level

before distortion and the average level of the noise floor. In most analog systems, such as
microphone preamps, the S/N ratio is around 92 dB.

Sample

A digital snapshot of an audio waveform at a particular point in time. In digital

audio, a series of numeric samples reproduces an entire waveform, with higher sample
rates producing increased frequency response. (Note that musical samplers use the term
sample to describe a digital recording, rather than a digital snapshot.)

Sample rate

The number of samples per second. Higher sample rates produce increased

frequency response but require more disk space. To reproduce a given audio frequency, the
sample rate must be at least double that frequency. (See “Nyquist Frequency” on
page 284.)

Sampler

A musical device that records and plays digital sounds (known as samples in this

context) and lets you edit and store those sounds.

Sequencer

A programmable electronic device that can record and play a sequence of

musical events, such as samples, pitches, and rests. Most modern sequencers are MIDI-
based. (See “MIDI” on page 282.)

Session

A multitrack project in Adobe Audition. Session files are stored with the

extension .ses and contain details such as mixing and effects settings. Session files don’t
contain audio data; instead they contain pathnames pointing to the sound files used in the
session.

64-bit Doubles

See “64-bit doubles (RAW) (.dbl)” on page 232.

SMPTE timecode

(Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers timecode) A

timing reference used to synchronize two devices. SMPTE timecode is divided into hours,
minutes, seconds, and frames.

Sound card

A hardware device that lets your computer play and record audio.

Sound wave

A wave of air molecules. Humans can hear sound waves with frequencies of

20 to 20,000 Hz.

Stereo

A signal with a left and right channel, allowing for spatial placement of sounds.

Stripe

To copy SMPTE timecode to a single track of a multitrack tape so remaining tracks

can be synchronized with other devices.

ug.book Page 287 Tuesday, March 16, 2004 1:29 PM

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