|
NAB
Presents Its 2011 Technology Innovation Awards
The third
annual NAB Technology Innovation Awards were presented at the 2011
NAB Show in Las Vegas, Nevada, based on a competitive selection
process among the nominations received by the March 4, 2011 deadline.
NAB presents these awards to organizations that bring advanced communications
technology exhibits and demonstrations of significant merit to the
NAB Show. The technologies demonstrated cannot include commercial
products offered for sale prior to or at the NAB Show. This year's
winners are NPR Labs and Communications Research Centre
Canada.
NAB President
and CEO Gordon Smith presented the awards at the NAB Technology
Luncheon on April 13, 2011, held in conjunction with the Broadcast
Engineering Conference. During the presentation, Smith said, In
an ever-changing media world, broadcasting remains at the forefront,
constantly innovating to deliver the best services to our listeners
and viewers. And it is because of those of you in this room
the innovators that free, over-the-air broadcasting continues
to build a strong and successful future.
NPR Labs
As
one of America's few not-for-profit broadcast technology research
and development centers, NPR Labs is engaged with technical research
projects supporting the interests of U.S. public radio stations.
In the International Research Park (IRP) at the 2011 NAB Show, NPR
Labs presented its results to date on three current projects.
The first was
a proposed system for providing captioned radio (i.e.,
the display of text on a radio receivers screen presenting
transcription of the current audio broadcast), for use by the 23
million hearing-impaired Americans unable to directly access live
radio programming and emergency alerts. A second exhibit demonstrated
a new Personalized Audio Information Service (PAIS), the primary
application of which is the capture of over-the-air radio reading-service
transmissions and the organization of individual stories for indexed,
on-demand playback by blind and low-vision listeners, utilizing
HD Radio technology. Finally, NPR Labs presented its advanced IBOC
interference propagation mapping application, intended to produce
highly accurate coverage maps for HD Radio stations.
Mike
Starling, Executive Director of NPRs Technology Research Center
and NPR Labs, accepted the Technology Innovation award.
Communication
Research Centre Canada
Well known
in the world of media R&D, the Communications Research Centre
(CRC) is the Canadian governments primary laboratory for research
and development in advanced telecommunications. The organization
received its award for a range of developments it displayed at the
2011 NAB Show, which were also found among this years International
Research Park exhibits. 
CRCs
demonstrations included its audio loudness metering scheme that
has become the basis for the ITU BS.1770 loudness measurement algorithm,
along with a proposed system for audio-quality metrics, and a 2D-to-3D
video conversion technology generating high-quality 3D video at
low cost. CRC also showcased the first FM-RDS radio application
that can be distributed through the Android market, which also enables
hybrid radio broadcasts converging on-air and online
radio services. Other exhibits from CRC presented high-quality video
frame-rate conversion, software-defined radio for broadcast applications,
and the COVLAB broadcast coverage prediction system.
Accepting the Technology Innovation award for Communications Research
Centre Canada was its Principal Research Scientist, Dr. Yiyan Wu.
While
technological innovations are evident throughout the product displays
on the NAB Show exhibit floor, were particularly pleased to
showcase technological developments in media that havent reached
the marketplace yet, said NAB Senior Vice President of Science
and Technology Lynn Claudy. The NAB Technology Innovation
Awards celebrate those glimpses of the future, and the demonstrations
by CRC and NPR Labs are well deserving winners among a growing field
of competitive entries.
NAB Science
and Technology congratulates this years winners for their
outstanding work and commitment to continued advancement of the
broadcasting industry.
|