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Cascade Adaptive Filters and Applications to Acoustic Echo Cancellation

Cascade Adaptive Filters and Applications to Acoustic Echo Cancellation. Yuan Chen Advisor: Professor Paul Cuff. Introduction. Goal: Remove reverberation of far-end input from near –end input by forming an estimation of the echo path. Review of Previous Work.

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Cascade Adaptive Filters and Applications to Acoustic Echo Cancellation

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  1. Cascade Adaptive Filters and Applications to Acoustic Echo Cancellation Yuan Chen Advisor: Professor Paul Cuff

  2. Introduction Goal: Remove reverberation of far-end input from near –end input by forming an estimation of the echo path

  3. Review of Previous Work • Considered cascaded filter architecture of memoryless nonlinearity and linear, FIR filter • Applied method of generalized nonlinear NLMS algorithm to perform adaptation • Choice of nonlinear functions: cubic B-spline, piecewise linear function

  4. Spline (Nonlinear) Function • Interpolation between evenly spaced control points: • Piecewise Linear Function: M. Solazziet al. “An adaptive spline nonlinear function for blind signal processing.”

  5. Nonlinear, Cascaded Adaptation • Linear Filter Taps: • Nonlinear Filter Parameters: • Step Size Normalization:

  6. Optimal Filter Configuration • For stationary environment, LMS filters converge to least squares (LS) filter • Choose filter taps to minimize MSE: • Solution to normal equations: • Input data matrix:

  7. Nonlinear Extension – Least Squares Spline (Piecewise Linear) Function • Choose control points to minimize MSE: • Spline formulation provides mapping from input to control point “weights”:

  8. Optimality Conditions – Optimize with respect to control points • First Partial Derivative: • Expressing all constraints: • In matrix form: • Solve normal equations:

  9. Least Squares Hammerstein Filter • Difficult to directly solve for both filter taps and control points simultaneously • Consider Iterative Approach: • Solve for best linear, FIR LS filter given current control points • Solve for optimal configuration of nonlinear function control points given updated filter taps • Iterate until convergence

  10. Hammerstein Optimization • Given filter taps, choose control points for min. MSE: • Define, rearrange, and substitute: • Similarity in problem structure:

  11. Results • Echo Reduction Loss Enhancement (ERLE): • Simulate AEC using: a.) input samples drawn i.i.d. from Gsn(0, 1) b.) voice audio input • Use sigmoid distortion and linear acoustic impulse response

  12. Conclusions • Under ergodicity and stationarity constraints, iterative least squares method converges to optimal filter configuration for Hammerstein cascaded systems • Generalized nonlinear NLMS algorithm does not always converge to the optimum provided by least squares approach • In general, Hammerstein cascaded systems cheaply introduce nonlinear compensation

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