Title :
Robust transmission of MELP-compressed speech: an illustrative example of joint source-channel decoding
Author :
Fazel, Tahereh ; Fuja, Thomas
Author_Institution :
Hughes Network Syst. Inc., Germantown, MD, USA
fDate :
6/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A mixed-excitation linear predictive (MELP) speech coder was selected as the US federal standard for 2400 b/s speech compression. This paper examines the quality of MELP-compressed speech when transmitted over noisy communication channels in conjunction with a variety of error-control schemes. The focus is on channel decoders that exploit the "residual redundancy" inherent in the MELP bitstream. This residual redundancy, which is manifested by the correlation in time and the nonuniform distribution of various MELP parameters, can be quantified by modeling the parameters as one-step Markov chains and computing the entropy rate of the Markov chains based on the relative frequencies of transitions. Moreover, this residual redundancy can be exploited by an appropriately "tuned" channel decoder to provide substantial coding gain when compared with decoders that do not exploit it. Channel coding schemes include conventional binary convolutional codes and iteratively-decoded parallel concatenated convolutional (turbo) codes.
Keywords :
Markov processes; binary codes; code standards; combined source-channel coding; concatenated codes; convolutional codes; data compression; iterative decoding; linear predictive coding; speech coding; speech intelligibility; telecommunication standards; turbo codes; 2400 bit/s; MELP bitstream; MELP parameters; MELP-compressed speech quality; US federal standard; binary convolutional codes; channel decoder; channel decoders; coding gain; correlation; entropy rate; error-control schemes; iteratively-decoded parallel concatenated convolutional codes; joint source-channel decoding; mixed-excitation linear predictive speech coder; noisy communication channels; nonuniform distribution; one-step Markov chains; residual redundancy; robust transmission; speech compression; turbo codes; Code standards; Communication channels; Convolutional codes; Distributed computing; Entropy; Frequency; Iterative decoding; Redundancy; Robustness; Speech;
Journal_Title :
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCOMM.2003.813257