SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
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. 7.95 GB; SS/DL
Physical Disc Format
DVD-9
Nyquist Frequency
Sony-Philips Digital Interface Format (S/PDIF)
2. Low Pressure; Part in a longitudinal wave where the particles are spread apart
Dolby 7.1
Oversampling
Rarefaction
Overflow
3. The loudest point of a Full Scale system
Compression
0 dB FS
Significand
Psychoacoustics
4. DAW's and software must buffer when converting or bouncing and this latency can add up if not monitored
Optical Cable
Conversion Buffering
Compression
CobraNet
5. 12cm plastic disc; 1.2mm thick; One- sided; Red Laser; 1.6 microns between tracks; 125 nanometer pits
MONO
Red Book
Stapedes Reflex
Algorithm
6. Serial Copy Management System; main difference between AES3 & S/PIDF
SCMS
CPU Buffering
Pad Head & Tail
Quantization
7. 8.75 GB; DS/SL
Edit Decision List
Sinusoidal
DVD-10
Frames
8. 8- in/8- out on one cable; 25- pin D- sub connector
Resolution
Bit Rate
D/A Conversion Signal Flow
Tascam Digital Interface Format (TDIF)
9. Sony and Philips optical disc format; Utilizes sigma delta DSD to offer higher resolution; 1- bit; 2.8224 MHz; 6-Channel
DVD-14
Quantization Error
Playback Buffering
SACD
10. 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
Micron
Multichannel Audio Digital Interface (MADI)
Equal Loudness Contour
CPU Buffering
11. More accuracy in low amplitudes and less in higher amplitudes
Zero-Latency Monitoring
Lightpipe
Requirements for CD Audio
Amplitude Accuracy
12. Occurs as data is assembled into meaningful bits or information and as left & right channels are separated
6 dB
I/O Connection Buffering
Signal- to- Noise Ratio
Sample Rate
13. Specific set of instructions for carrying out a data reduction technique that determines how to 'save' binary data information efficiently
Algorithm
Perceptual Coding
Aliasing
Effective Bit Depth
14. Increases D/A sample rate from nominal rate to oversampling rate by turning series multi- bit PCM samples into 1- bit samples; (ex. => 44.1kHz sample rate converted to 2.8MHz and simultaneously converts multi- bit samples to 1- bit); Low Pass Filter
Equal Loudness Contour
Quantizer
Non -Compressed Audio Data Rate Formula
Interpolation Filter
15. Having a repeated succession of waves or curves as in a sound waveform
Direct Stream Digital
Internal Resolution
Sinusoidal
Cutoff Frequency
16. 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
Fidelity
Oversampling
Intensity Stereo
EtherSound
17. 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)
Digital Signal Processing
Decimal- to-Binary Conversion
Buffering
RMS
18. Describes acceptable data - performances both offered and essential for a disc player - and the complete user experience
Voltage
Physical Disc Format
Photoreceptor
Logical Format
19. 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
Successive Approximation
A/D Conversion
Optical Cable
Lightpipe
20. 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
Quantization
DVD-14
Class - D Amplifier
Quantizer
21. A method of representing real numbers using a mantissa and an exponent
Optical Cable
Floating Point
Voltage
Digital
22. Digital and analog processing capability is combined on a single microchip allowing for 1- bit resolution at high sample rates
Threshold of Pain
Foldover
Interpolation Filter
Delta-Sigma Modulation
23. Industry Standards: -6 dB Peak = -20 RMS Meter
Joint Stereo
Average Bit Rate
Headroom Bits
Recording Levels
24. Uses entropy coding as the basis; Computer data compression algorithm that packages files such as .ZIP & .RAR
Data Packing
Blu-Ray
Class - D Amplifier
Equal Loudness Contour
25. 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
Subbands
Quantization Intervals
Pulse Code Modulation
Intensity Stereo
26. Fractional part of a floating- point number; Also called the mantissa; Defines precision
Significand
Algorithm
A/D Conversion Signal Flow
Analog
27. 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
Ethernet
Internal Resolution
Requirements for CD Audio
D/A Conversion Signal Flow
28. Data transmission protocol over which computer network traffic travels; Poorly suited to real- time transmission but numerous attempts have been made to harness the technology because of its flexible routing; Uses simple Cat5 cabling; Resists interfe
Audio over Ethernet (AoE)
Codec
Buffering
Motion Pictures Experts Group
29. The difference in volume between the loudest and quietest sounds of a source
DVD-9
Dynamic Range
Conversion Buffering
Sony-Philips Digital Interface Format (S/PDIF)
30. Snippets of time in which frequency analysis takes place in a perceptual codec
Harry Nyquist
Sample- and-Hold
Frames
SCMS
31. Twice as many samples as the highest frequency at minimum; Sampling rate totally controls frequency response
Sampling Rule
2 Dimensions of Sound
AoE Formats
Lossy
32. Number of bits per second processed when sampling sound; (Sampling Rate x Bit Depth) = Resolution
Bit Rate
Zero-Latency Monitoring
Noise Shaping
Joint Stereo
33. 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)
Sony-Philips Digital Interface Format (S/PDIF)
Recording Levels
Delta-Sigma Modulation
Fletcher- Munson Curve
34. Eight channel digital surround sound system by Dolby
Successive Approximation
AoE Formats
Dolby 7.1
Glass Master
35. 15.9 GB; DS/DL
Attenuation
TOSLINK
DVD-18
Average Bit Rate
36. The act of a frequency swinging back and forth with a steady - uninterrupted rhythm
Sampling (Samples)
Blu-Ray
Frequency
Oscillation
37. The art of deciding where to place a processor in signal flow based on how that processor will be influenced by the other processors in the path
Gain Staging
Zero-Latency Monitoring
Lossless Formats
D/A Conversion Signal Flow
38. CBR; Codecs encodes data at a constant rate regardless of density of the audio file
Foldover
Additive Synthesis...
Constant Bit Rate
DVD-5
39. Based on Full Scale (dB/FS); -6dB represents a loss of one bit so account for this when calculating
Storage Conversion Steps
Effective Bit Depth
Data Packing
Perceptual Coding
40. Visual graph that shows how loud a sound is at different frequencies
Sawtooth Wave
Sonogram
DVD-9
Bit Depth Effect on Dynamic Range
41. 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
Quantizer
Quantization Intervals
Sampling Theorem
D/A Conversion
42. Six channel (five speakers and one subwoofer for bass) digital surround sound system by Dolby
Dolby 7.1
Headroom Bits
Base 2 System
Dolby 5.1
43. 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.
Aliasing
Rarefaction
Motion Pictures Experts Group
Lossy Formats
44. Ratio of magnitude of the analytical signal to the magnitude of the background noise signal
Sampling Theorem
Joseph Fourier
Fletcher- Munson Curve
Signal- to- Noise Ratio
45. Decibels Full Scale
Harmonic Content
Sample- and-Hold
Fourier Series
dBFS
46. 12.33 GB; DS/ML
X-Axis Terminology
Lightpipe
Bit Rate
DVD-14
47. Lossless Format; Can hold up to 25GB on a single- layer disc and 50GB on a dual- layer disc
Red Book
Blu-Ray
CPU Buffering
Class - D Amplifier
48. The number of compressions or rarefactions in one second; The higher the frequency the more compressions & rarefactions per second; Measured in Hertz
Attenuation
Interpolation Filter
Sampling Theorem
Frequency
49. (Amplitude Based) Amplitude: Voltage; Quantization; Bit Depth; Quantization Intervals; Quantization Noise; [Signal:Quantization Noise Ratio]; Dither; Dynamic Range
Joseph Fourier
Y-Axis Terminology
Class - D Amplifier
Resolution
50. Process of building a complex tone by starting with the fundamental frequency and adding pure tone harmonics
Sampling Theorem
Sampling (Samples)
Additive Synthesis...
DVD-9