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A
Useful Tool to Gain Familiarity with Audio Loudness
Controlling
audio loudness will always be an issue for radio and television
broadcasters. Loudness is a subjective phenomenon and ultimately
subject to the maxim that you cant please all the people
all the time. Loudness metrology however has come a long way.
For TV broadcasters, the FCC Regulations to implement the Commercial
Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act begin to take effect
December 12, 2012. The requirements these regulations place on stations
were summarized in the
December 19, 2011 issue of TV TechCheck. The
September 10, 2012 issue of TV TechCheck detailed best
practices for television broadcasters developed by the NAB
TV Technology Committee, with NAB Labs support. But beyond regulations
placed on television broadcasting, it is highly advisable for both
radio and television engineers to develop a personal understanding
of the perceptual side of loudness. Meters can only approximate
a listeners subjective response to audio signals with varying
types of content whose amplitude is dynamically changing. Even the
NAB best practices document admits while the main effort of
the station should be to manage the content so as to avoid loudness
complaints through use of proper measurement, mixing and adjustment;
it is recognized that perfection is not possible.
At
the recent IEEE Broadcast Symposium held last week in Alexandria
Va., Robert Orban, Founder and Chief Engineer at Orban, presented
a paper titled Measuring Automatic Loudness Controller Performance
with the ITU BS.1770-2 and Jones & Torick Loudness Meters.
In his talk, Orban described his lengthy experience with various
algorithms for measuring subjective audio loudness and conclusions
he has reached about the pluses and minuses of different approaches.
For those interested in their own investigation of matching loudness
measurements with personal judgments, Orban makes available multi-method
loudness meter software, available free for both Windows and Mac
environments. The Orban Loudness Meter Version 2.0 accepts two-channel
stereo inputs and simultaneously displays a number of different
metrics as shown in the screenshot below:
- The CBS
meter is a short-term loudness meter that displays
the details of moment-to-moment loudness with dynamics similar
to a VU meter. It uses the Jones & Torick algorithm developed
at the CBS Technology Center [Bronwyn L. Jones and Emil L. Torick,
A New Loudness Indicator for Use in Broadcasting,
J. SMPTE September 1981, pp. 772-777].
- The ITU-R
published Recommendation ITU-R BS.1770 in 2006: Algorithms
to measure audio programme loudness and true-peak audio level.
In 2011, this was updated to BS.1770-2, which adds gating so that
the meter ignores silence and is weighted toward louder program
material, which contributes most to a listeners perception
of loudness.
- The implementation
of the VU meter reaches 99% (0.09 dB) of steady-state when
presented with a 1 kHz tone burst with an on duration
of 300 ms and an off duration of 500 ms or more.
- The implementation
of the PPM can be switched for 5 ms or 10 ms attack times.
- Two true
peak-reading meters are provided. A red bar appearing in the VU
and PPM meters reads the peak values of the internal 48 kHz digital
samples within the meter. The Reconstructed Peak meter oversamples
8x and extrapolates the peaks of the signal after D/A conversion,
as specified in the BS.1770 standard.
Detailed technical
descriptions of the CBS algorithm and the ITU BS 1770-2 standard
can be found in the read me file on the Orban download
page for the meter along with additional details on the implementation
of the other conventional meter components. The Orban Loudness Meter
can be downloaded for free at www.orban.com/meter.
Call
for Speakers Deadline Extended to October 29
How are you and/or your company changing the face of Media and Entertainment?
Submit your session ideas for this year's Broadcast Engineering
Conference and help the industry keep up with evolving platforms,
devices and consumer expectations for increased mobility, interactivity,
customization, and an all-encompassing entertainment experience.
The deadline for submissions
has been extended to October 29.
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