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Test your basic knowledge |
Digital Audio
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
engineering
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Single- pin RCA cable or fiber- optic TOSLINK connector used for digital transfer; 75O coaxial - 2- channel unbalanced; 'Consumer' format of AES3
A/D Conversion Signal Flow
Sony-Philips Digital Interface Format (S/PDIF)
Word Clock
Additive Synthesis...
2. Ultra low- latency - 512- channel (on a gigabit network) - less flexible AoE format; Routed like audio cables...not network cables
EtherSound
Threshold of Pain
Quantizer
CobraNet
3. Data is transmitted over fiber optic lines; Uses a TOSLINK connecter instead of an RCA type; Can transmit multi- channel audio; Not susceptible to ground hum and loops; Able to support far higher rates of data transfer over greater distances than coa
Sample- and-Hold
Lossy Formats
Optical Cable
Non -Compressed Audio Data Rate Formula
4. Also known as equal loudness curves; Graph that indicates the average ear sensitivity to different frequencies at different SPL levels (as volume increases - these curves flatten out)
6 dB
Fletcher- Munson Curve
Decoder
Spectrum Multiplication
5. Signal voltage is relayed to a register from sample- and - hold circuit; Holds reference frequencies in binary form that decrease in value; Finds approximated value & assigns binary number accordingly
Normalizing
Acoustics
Successive Approximation
Footroom
6. The elapsed time it takes for a packet of data to arrive at its destination; Lagging or pause of an audio signal as digital processing occurs; Can be managed utilizing several forms of 'audio monitoring'
Bit Rate
Edit Decision List
Latency
Sawtooth Wave
7. Measures the highest levels of a signal being recorded or mixed; Monitors for clipping - which occurs at 0dBFS); Does not always reflect perceived volume of signal
RMS
Peak Level
Entropy Coding
DVD-5
8. Psychoacoustic model of data reduction used for general audio compression that aims to transmit only features perceptible to the human ear; Useful for mastering streaming media
Quantization
Class - D Amplifier
Perceptual Coding
Spectrum Multiplication
9. Full Scale; Type of metering that measures level in digital recording system; Recording and Mixing levels should NEVER exceed 0dB FS in digital audio or clipping will occur
Variable Bit Rate
Red Book
dB/FS
Quantization
10. Anytime bit depth is reduced the gap gets bigger so more dithering is required
Redither
Playback Buffering
dB/FS
AoE Formats
11. Number or variable that represents the number of times the base of a power is used as a factor; Defines magnitude
Red Book
dBFS
Exponent
6 dB
12. More accuracy in low amplitudes and less in higher amplitudes
Quantization
Amplitude Accuracy
Zero-Latency Monitoring
Lightpipe
13. Multi-Bit Words; (Pulse Code Modulation)
Logical Format
PCM
Speed of Sound
Average Bit Rate
14. Level above which audible sounds are painful (125 - 130 db)
6 dB
Average Bit Rate
MONO
Threshold of Pain
15. Method used in digital recording and reproduction in which a signal is sampled at various points and the resulting value is translated into binary numbers
Amplitude Accuracy
Requirements for CD Audio
Photoreceptor
Pulse Code Modulation
16. A time regulator that makes all samples and bits to align when working with interconnected digital devices; Basically a signal that all of the digital devices refer to when operating.
DVD-10
AoE Formats
Sampling Rule
Word Clock
17. Eight channel digital surround sound system by Dolby
DVD-9
Word Clock
Convolution
Dolby 7.1
18. ABR; Codecs that encode data by determining how dense or sparse areas of the audio are while also keeping bit rate within specified limits to avoid rebuffering
DVD-14
M-S Stereo
Average Bit Rate
Additive Synthesis...
19. VBR; Most common & best data reduction technique; Codecs that encode data by determining how dense or sparse areas of the audio are; Can result in buffering issues
SACD
Harmonic Content
Variable Bit Rate
Peak Level
20. Low Pressure; Part in a longitudinal wave where the particles are spread apart
Rarefaction
DVD-10
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
Requirements for A/D Conversion
21. Signal that uses variable voltage to create continuous waves resulting in an inexact transmission
Analog
Requirements for A/D Conversion
DVD-14
Masking Analysis...
22. DAW's and software must buffer when converting or bouncing and this latency can add up if not monitored
Index of Reflectivity
Jitter
Conversion Buffering
Pulse Width Modulation
23. Six channel (five speakers and one subwoofer for bass) digital surround sound system by Dolby
Oscillation
Dolby 5.1
DVD-Audio
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
24. Describes acceptable data - performances both offered and essential for a disc player - and the complete user experience
Logical Format
Data Packing
Frames
TOSLINK
25. AES
Red Book
Equal Loudness Contour
Quantizer
Audio Engineering Society
26. The set of rules that computers use to move files from one computer to another on an internet
Speed of Sound
Transfer Protocol
Base 2 System
Oversampling
27. If a signal is sampled at a rate higher than twice the highest significant signal frequency and at evenly spaced intervals - then the samples contain all the information of the original signal
Masking Analysis...
Lossless Formats
Sampling Theorem
Spectra
28. 16-Bit; 44.1 kHz; PCM; Stereo
Oversampling
Requirements for CD Audio
Delta-Sigma Modulation
Sampling Rule
29. Channels are processed one at a time and the results are stored on multiple CPU buffers that alternately send data as DAW requests the data for playback; First few seconds are relayed to the buffer prior to processing and playback and it continuously
Frames
SACD
CPU Buffering
Threshold of Hearing
30. Built into DAWs; Bits are added when signals are mixed together to avoid clipping
Frequency
Headroom Bits
Cutoff Frequency
Quantization Error
31. Electromagnetic receptor that detects the radiation known as visible light
Photoreceptor
Quantization
Quantization Intervals
Intensity Stereo
32. Used when the reference pressure of a sound is 20 microPa (0.00002); Sound Pressure Level; Measure of amplitude
dB/SPL
Lossless Formats
Decimation Filter
Pulse Width Modulation
33. Improper (false) sampling of high frequencies that cause much lower frequencies to be produced when the audio is reconstructed; Foldover happens at higher frequencies as harmonics reach levels that exceed the Nyquist limit.
Square Wave
Aliasing
Fletcher- Munson Curve
Oscillation
34. 15.9 GB; DS/DL
Coaxial
DVD-18
Intensity
Sinusoidal
35. Samples are duplicated and the playback sampling rate correspondingly increased; Significantly raises the Nyquist limit to a range well beyond human hearing; Processing 'pushes' the distortion resulting from quantization error into these higher frequ
SCMS
Noise Shaping
PCM
Threshold of Pain
36. Root Mean Square; Refers to taking the square root of all instantaneous amplitudes; Takes the average of those squares; (-6 Peak Level is approximately equal to -20 RMS)
EtherSound
Square Wave
Quantization
RMS
37. 4.38 GB; SS/SL
Pulse Density Modulation
DVD-5
Quantization Error
Harmonic Content
38. Subtract place values from the decimal number and place ones or zeros in the correct places
Decoder
dB/FS
Interpolation Filter
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
39. Occurs as data is assembled into meaningful bits or information and as left & right channels are separated
I/O Connection Buffering
Noise Shaping
Convolution
Algorithm
40. The number of compressions or rarefactions in one second; The higher the frequency the more compressions & rarefactions per second; Measured in Hertz
Micron
Motion Pictures Experts Group
Frequency
D/A Conversion Signal Flow
41. Based on Full Scale (dB/FS); -6dB represents a loss of one bit so account for this when calculating
Average Bit Rate
Effective Bit Depth
Square Wave
Internal Resolution
42. Sony sigma- delta modulation based technology that bypasses the decimation and interpolation steps found in PCM converters
DVD-Audio
Headroom Bits
Overflow
Direct Stream Digital
43. Digital (binary) measurements of how long each pulse is either on or off; Width of increasing voltage or decreasing voltage is assigned a 1 or 0 respectively
Pulse Width Modulation
Blu-Ray
Headroom Bits
Intensity
44. Roughly around 1 -130 ft/s
M-S Stereo
Psychoacoustics
Speed of Sound
Rarefaction
45. Serial Copy Management System; main difference between AES3 & S/PIDF
SCMS
Exponent
DVD-5
Spectra
46. Allows for an internal sample rate at multiples of the input and output rates; Alleviates the need for steep 'brickwall' filters; Often combined with internal '1- bit' processing; Increases smoothing effect
RMS Meter
Oversampling
Lightpipe
Peak Level
47. Amplitude meter that takes the square root of all instantaneous amplitudes and averages them to find a mean and squares that value; Useful with particularly complex waveforms
DVD-14
RMS Meter
Lossy Formats
DVD-Audio
48. A situation where a calculated value cannot fit into the number of digits reserved for it
CPU Buffering
Sine Wave
Cutoff Frequency
Overflow
49. Removes high frequency images and noise and smoothes the stair case output coming from of the sample and hold circuit; Also called a SMOOTHING FILTER
Anti-Imaging Filter
Sample- and-Hold
Nanometer
Frames
50. Decibels Full Scale
Equal Loudness Contour
dBFS
Pulse Density Modulation
Footroom