Hello João,Take a look at example 06 in William;s tID, which does timbral 
ordering of small grains quite similar to what you are describing. I was really 
happy with what I got, but I had a vaguer idea in mind... William, is there a 
way to choose certain "descriptors" for the reordering? Or to give different 
"weight" to certain parameters?
Happy 2014, list!Zax


 

To: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 3 Jan 2014 11:30:17 +0100
From: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [PD] suggestions for spectral "weight" anaylsis




Hi William and all,
I thought there would some relevant things in your library. I'll look into your 
suggestions later.
I don't have a patch that other people can look at, but I can try to explain 
the context a bit better:- I have a sound of ~40s spoken voice. I'm going to 
split it in fragments (for now 100ms each) and reorder them  - one of the 
possibilities of reordering the fragments would be to have a "continuous" 
timbre change in the end. E.g. going from noisy consonants to clean vowels- for 
the analysis, I guess a mixture of pitch and harmonicity (don't know yet in 
which order it should be done) would be adequate
I noticed your objects work in real time. As the analysis is to be done before 
the performance, I guess I'll either let the sound play throughout to get the 
analysis data, or then I'll divide the fragments through x analysis patches, to 
make it run x times faster.
In this case it is spoken voice, but I guess it could by anything else.
Best,
João
Hi João,
A measure that would give something near 1.0 for white noise and near 0 for a 
sine wave would be "spectral flatness", which is in the timbreID library. But 
if you're looking to see how well a spectrum's partials line up harmonically, 
you won't find that in timbreID yet. One quick option would be to use sigmund~ 
to get the current pitch, then search the spectrum for the amount of energy in 
bin ranges related to the expected set of harmonics. Compare that with energy 
in non-harmonic bins. But then, for things like gongs that sound "pitchy" but 
have inharmonic spectra, that won't be much help. Depends a lot on what you're 
trying to do.

You *might* find specSpread~ useful, which measures how widely or tightly 
energy is concentrated around the spectrum's center of gravity. It's in units 
of Hz though.



On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 12:38 PM, João Pais <[email protected]> wrote:

Hello,



I wanted to ask if there are any suggestions for spectral "weight" analysis.

With "weight" I mean a factor which would measure the harmonicity of a sound - 
e.g. white noise being 1, and a sinus/silence 0. Surely it exists a propper 
word for this already, but I don't know one.



Is there any external or patch around that does something similar?



Thanks,



jmmmp



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-- 
William Brent
www.williambrent.com

“Great minds flock together”
Conflations: conversational idiom for the 21st century


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