• DocumentCode
    1307466
  • Title

    High-performance DSPs

  • Author

    Du, Junchen ; Warner, George ; Vallow, Erik ; Hollenbach, Tom

  • Author_Institution
    Lucent Technol., AT&T Bell Labs., Allentown, PA, USA
  • Volume
    17
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    3/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    16
  • Lastpage
    26
  • Abstract
    The processing delay is a serious constraint for speech communication. A one-way end-to-end delay of more than 150 ms can severely degrade the quality of real-time conversations. The components of the total system delay includes the speech frame size, the look ahead, other algorithmic delays, multiplexing delay, processing delay for computation, and transmission delay. At the transcoder rate adaptor unit (TRAU), the only delay that can be manipulated is the processing delay. The TRAUs are generally positioned remote to the base transceiver station (BTS). The channel codec units (CCUs) are located in the BTS. In general, 16 kbit/s traffic channels can be used for full rate speech between the TRAU and BTS. By putting the TRAU remote to the BTS, DSPs for speech coding can be utilized more efficiently to cut system cost. High performance DSPs, such as the Lucent DSP16000, can be used to further cut the cost per speech channel. This article presents an implementation of GSM enhanced full rate (EFR) codec on the Lucent Technologies´ DSP16000. The original European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) C code has been restructured to address the issues of MIPS (million instructions per second), RAM usage, and processing delay. We give a performance overview of vocoder implementations on some existing fixed-point DSPs and discuss the architecture of the DSP16000. Details on how the ETSI C code is restructured are presented. The DSP16210 implementation results are then discussed
  • Keywords
    C language; cellular radio; delays; digital signal processing chips; fixed point arithmetic; linear predictive coding; speech codecs; speech coding; vocoders; 16 kbit/s; CELP; DSP16210; ETSI C code; European Telecommunications Standards Institute; GSM enhanced full rate codec; Lucent DSP16000; Lucent Technologies; MIPS; RAM usage; algorithmic delays; base transceiver station; channel codec units; fixed-point DSP; full rate speech; high-performance DSP; look ahead; multiplexing delay; performance; processing delay; real-time conversation quality; speech coding; speech communication; speech frame size; total system delay; traffic channels; transcoder rate adaptor unit; transmission delay; vocoder implementations; Codecs; Costs; Degradation; Delay systems; Digital signal processing; Oral communication; Speech coding; Speech processing; Telecommunication standards; Transceivers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1053-5888
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/79.826408
  • Filename
    826408