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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. Having a repeated succession of waves or curves as in a sound waveform
Sinusoidal
AES3
Decoder
Base 2 System
2. 16-Bit; 44.1 kHz; PCM; Stereo
DVD-14
Stapedes Reflex
Requirements for CD Audio
Frequency
3. RAM holds in memory audio data before it is transferred to the memory controller; Certain amount of data is processed before large amounts of data are streamed to prevent latency
Optical Cable
Buffering
Class - D Amplifier
Peak Level
4. Based on Full Scale (dB/FS); -6dB represents a loss of one bit so account for this when calculating
Nanometer
Delta-Sigma Modulation
Sampling Rule
Effective Bit Depth
5. Sony and Philips optical disc format; Utilizes sigma delta DSD to offer higher resolution; 1- bit; 2.8224 MHz; 6-Channel
D/A Conversion Signal Flow
SACD
Oscillation
Joseph Fourier
6. Leaving space at beginning and ending of song for data crunching during mastering; Last step in mastering process
Pad Head & Tail
0 dB FS
DVD-9
Joint Stereo
7. Only 2 digits used; The value of each place (ones - hundreds - etc.) are as follows from greatest to least: 128 - 64 - 32 - 16 - 8 - 4 - 2 - 1
Latency
Base 2 System
0 dB FS
Cutoff Frequency
8. Signal that uses variable voltage to create continuous waves resulting in an inexact transmission
Analog
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
Peak Level
Joint Stereo
9. Reference voltage determined by summing the voltage values of a predetermined number of previous samples; Numbers of 1 in row = waveform peak; Numbers of 0 in row = waveform trough; Basis of Sony's Direct Stream Digital (DSD)
Pulse Density Modulation
Red Book
Decoder
SCMS
10. Take up half as many bits (50%); Algorithm can keep same quality by lossing the stereo track
Compression
Interleaved
dB/FS
MONO
11. (Amplitude Based) Amplitude: Voltage; Quantization; Bit Depth; Quantization Intervals; Quantization Noise; [Signal:Quantization Noise Ratio]; Dither; Dynamic Range
CPU Buffering
Y-Axis Terminology
DVD-14
Psychoacoustics
12. Reduces A/D sample rate from the oversampled rate to nominal rate by turning series of one- bit samples into a series of multi- bit PCM samples; (ex. => 2.8MHz sample rate converted to 44.1kHz and simultaneously converts 1-Bit samples to multi- bit);
Masking Analysis...
Anti-Imaging Filter
Cutoff Frequency
Decimation Filter
13. Based on psychoacoustics - these are the basis of frequency analysis for a perceptual codec;
Subbands
Attenuation
A/D Conversion
Impulse Response
14. 8.75 GB; DS/SL
Headroom Bits
DVD-10
Amplitude Accuracy
AoE Formats
15. Visual graph that shows how loud a sound is at different frequencies
Average Bit Rate
Spectra
Overflow
Sonogram
16. Found that aliasing was always a problem no matter how fast you sample; Less data recorded but more accurate; 2 samples per wave length.
Harry Nyquist
Photoreceptor
Bit Depth Effect on Dynamic Range
Red Book
17. Smallest interval measurable by a scientific instrument; Defined by bit rate (sample rate x bit depth)
Class - D Amplifier
Pad Head & Tail
Logical Format
Resolution
18. 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.
Base 2 System
Sony-Philips Digital Interface Format (S/PDIF)
Tascam Digital Interface Format (TDIF)
Aliasing
19. Measure of the amplitude of a longitudinal wave
Intensity
Perceptual Coding
Direct Stream Digital
Non -Compressed Audio Data Rate Formula
20. 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'
DVD-14
Lossy
Sampling (Samples)
Latency
21. Ultra low- latency - 512- channel (on a gigabit network) - less flexible AoE format; Routed like audio cables...not network cables
Index of Reflectivity
EtherSound
Sonogram
Dolby 5.1
22. Sample Rate x Bit Depth x # of Channels
RMS
Non -Compressed Audio Data Rate Formula
Pulse Density Modulation
Spectra
23. Number of bits per second processed when sampling sound; (Sampling Rate x Bit Depth) = Resolution
Internal Resolution
Bit Rate
Oscillation
Spectra
24. Father of modern information theory; Solidified the Nyquist Theory by adding the concept that bits per second (binary representation of audio signals) must be at equal intervals to accurately represent data
Effective Bit Depth
Intensity Stereo
Joseph Fourier
Claude Shannon
25. Measure of sound pressure over the frequency spectrum - for which a listener perceives a constant loudness when presented with pure steady tones
TOSLINK
Equal Loudness Contour
AES3
Cutoff Frequency
26. ADAT Optcal; 8- in/8- out on two cables; Fiber- optic - TOSLINK connector
Playback Buffering
Nanometer
Impulse Response
Lightpipe
27. Same as 'aliasing'
Foldover
A/D Conversion Signal Flow
2 Dimensions of Sound
Decoder
28. 'Reconstructing' part of digital audio
Claude Shannon
Blu-Ray
Interpolation Filter
D/A Conversion
29. 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
AES3
Noise Shaping
Digital Signal Processing
Bit Depth
30. Inner ear component that attaches to the stapes and helps to decrease the amplitude of vibrations; Causes the masking phenomenon
Recording Levels
Analog
Stapedes Reflex
Harry Nyquist
31. Low Pressure; Part in a longitudinal wave where the particles are spread apart
M-S Stereo
Storage Conversion Steps
Rarefaction
Zero-Latency Monitoring
32. Overtones that contribute to the timbre of a sound and make up a complex waveform's physical characteristics
Harmonic Content
Claude Shannon
Acoustics
Blu-Ray
33. More accuracy in low amplitudes and less in higher amplitudes
Intensity Stereo
A/D Conversion
Delta-Sigma Modulation
Amplitude Accuracy
34. 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
Resolution
Amplitude Accuracy
Anti-Imaging Filter
Compression
35. Allowance of noise floor below that which is required for the final product
Sampling Rule
D/A Conversion
Footroom
Gain Staging
36. Have odd numbered harmonics
Square Wave
Gain Staging
Oscillation
Claude Shannon
37. Difference in brightness between land and pit on a CD Physical Format
Recording Levels
Quantization
Sample- and-Hold
Index of Reflectivity
38. Very selective method of lowering buffer levels by halting different levels of audio processing
Bit Depth Effect on Dynamic Range
Direct Stream Digital
Low-Latency Monitoring
Sampling (Samples)
39. Very quiet digital amplifier that produces a series of output pulses with the audio signal coded the same as the width of the output pulses; Pulses are used to represent wave forms and are either on or off; Intense signals have long pulses with short
Direct Monitoring
Pad Head & Tail
Class - D Amplifier
Codec
40. Measuring equipment in A/D conversion that processes voltage and provides a value for that voltage
Nanometer
Quantizer
Exponent
Direct Stream Digital
41. More aggressive lossy data reduction techniques that require further manipulation of the stereo field; Examples are 'Intensity' & 'M-S'
Joint Stereo
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
Decimation Filter
Index of Reflectivity
42. Multi-Bit Words; (Pulse Code Modulation)
Ethernet
Frequency
Peak Level
PCM
43. 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
Micron
Floating Point
Foldover
Pulse Code Modulation
44. A network communications protocol that specifies how machines will exchange data; Uses a broadcast system in which one machine transmits its message on the communication medium and the other machines listen for messages directed to them
Tascam Digital Interface Format (TDIF)
Non -Compressed Audio Data Rate Formula
Ethernet
X-Axis Terminology
45. Computer program or device capable of encoding and/or decoding a digital data stream with the end result being a reduced file size
Lossy Formats
Sample Rate
Codec
Cutoff Frequency
46. The mathematics - algorithms - and the techniques used to manipulate signals after they have been converted to digital form
DVD-9
Digital Signal Processing
Edit Decision List
DVD-Audio
47. Subtract place values from the decimal number and place ones or zeros in the correct places
SCMS
Significand
Sine Wave
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
48. AES
Perceptual Coding
Lossless Formats
Audio Engineering Society
Sampling (Samples)
49. Most significant lossless coding technique in current use; Measure of disorder in which long strings of data are represented by short symbols and uses the shortest symbols to represent the most common repetitive audio data maximizing data reduction
Pulse Code Modulation
Pass Band
Joseph Fourier
Entropy Coding
50. The act of a frequency swinging back and forth with a steady - uninterrupted rhythm
Oscillation
DVD-9
Playback Buffering
Threshold of Pain