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Dive into the research topics where Redwan Salami is active.

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Featured researches published by Redwan Salami.


IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing | 2002

The adaptive multirate wideband speech codec (AMR-WB)

Bruno Bessette; Redwan Salami; Roch Lefebvre; Milan Jelinek; Jani Rotola-Pukkila; Janne Vainio; Hannu Mikkola; Kari Jarvinen

This paper describes the adaptive multirate wideband (AMR-WB) speech codec selected by the Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) for GSM and the third generation mobile communication WCDMA system for providing wideband speech services. The AMR-WB speech codec algorithm was selected in December 2000 and the corresponding specifications were approved in March 2001. The AMR-WB codec was also selected by the International Telecommunication Union-Telecommunication Sector (ITU-T) in July 2001 in the standardization activity for wideband speech coding around 16 kb/s and was approved in January 2002 as Recommendation G.722.2. The adoption of AMR-WB by ITU-T is of significant importance since for the first time the same codec is adopted for wireless as well as wireline services. AMR-WB uses an extended audio bandwidth from 50 Hz to 7 kHz and gives superior speech quality and voice naturalness compared to existing second- and third-generation mobile communication systems. The wideband speech service provided by the AMR-WB codec will give mobile communication speech quality that also substantially exceeds (narrowband) wireline quality. The paper details AMR-WB standardization history, algorithmic description including novel techniques for efficient ACELP wideband speech coding and subjective quality performance of the codec.


IEEE Transactions on Speech and Audio Processing | 1998

Design and description of CS-ACELP: a toll quality 8 kb/s speech coder

Redwan Salami; Claude Laflamme; Jean-Pierre Adoul; Akitoshi Kataoka; Shinji Hayashi; Takehiro Moriya; Claude Lamblin; Dominique Massaloux; Stéphane Proust; Peter Kroon; Yair Shoham

This paper describes the 8 kb/s speech coding algorithm G.729 which has been standardized by ITU-T. The algorithm is based on a conjugate-structure algebraic CELP (CS-ACELP) coding technique and uses 10 ms speech frames. The codec delivers toll-quality speech (equivalent to 32 kb/s ADPCM) for most operating conditions. This paper describes the coder structure in detail and discusses the reasons behind certain design choices. A 16-b fixed-point version has been developed as part of Recommendation G.729 and a summary of the subjective test results based on a real-time implementation of this version are presented.


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 2005

AMR-WB+: a new audio coding standard for 3rd generation mobile audio services

Jari Mäkinen; Bruno Bessette; Stefan Bruhn; Pasi Ojala; Redwan Salami; Anisse Taleb

Highly efficient low-rate audio coding methods are required for new compelling and commercially interesting applications of streaming, messaging and broadcasting services using audio media in 3rd generation mobile communication systems. After an audio codec selection phase, 3GPP has standardized the extended AMR-WB (AMR-WB+) codec that provides a unique performance at very low bit rates from below 10 kbps up to 24 kbps. This paper discusses the requirements imposed by mobile audio services and gives a technology overview of AMR-WB+ as a codec matching these requirements while providing outstanding audio quality.


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 1991

16 kbps wideband speech coding technique based on algebraic CELP

Claude Laflamme; J.-P. Adoul; Redwan Salami; S. Morissette; Philippe Mabilleau

The application of algebraic code excited linear prediction (ACELP) coding to wideband speech is presented. An algebraic codebook with a 20 bit address can be used without any storage requirements and, more importantly, with a very efficient search procedure which allows for real-time implementation. The authors describe an efficient procedure for searching such a large codebook deploying a focused search strategy, where less than 0.1% of the codebook is searched with performance very close to that of a full search. High-quality speech at a bit rate of 13 kbps was obtained.<<ETX>>


vehicular technology conference | 1994

A toll quality 8 kb/s speech codec for the personal communications system (PCS)

Redwan Salami; Claude Laflamme; J.-P. Adoul; D. Massaloux

A toll quality speech codec at 8 kb/s suitable for the future personal communications system is presented. The codec is currently under standardization by the ITU-T (successor of CCITT) where the codec terms of reference were mainly determined considering PCS application. The encoding algorithm is based on algebraic code-excited linear prediction (ACELP) and has a speech frame of 10 ms. Efficient pitch and codebook search strategies, along with efficient quantization procedures, have been developed to achieve toll quality encoded speech with a complexity implementable on current fixed-point DSP chips. Formal subjective listening tests, performed by ITU-T SG 12, showed that the codec quality is equivalent to that of G.726 ADPCM at 32 kb/s in error-free conditions and it outperforms G.726 under error conditions. The codec performs adequately under tandeming conditions, and can support a frame erasure rate up to 3% with a degradation in its performance that is still worse than the ITU-T requirements, and this is one subject of study for the next phase. The algorithm has been implemented on a single fixed-point DSP for the ITU-T subjective rest, and required about 29 MIPS. An optimized version, however, requires 24 MIPS without any speech quality degradation. >


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 2007

ITU-T G.729.1: AN 8-32 Kbit/S Scalable Coder Interoperable with G.729 for Wideband Telephony and Voice Over IP

Stéphane Ragot; Balazs Kovesi; Romain Trilling; David Virette; Nicolas Duc; Dominique Massaloux; Stéphane Proust; Bernd Geiser; Martin Gartner; Stefan Schandl; Hervé Taddei; Yang Gao; Eyal Shlomot; Hiroyuki Ehara; Koji Yoshida; Tommy Vaillancourt; Redwan Salami; Mi Suk Lee; Do Young Kim

This paper describes the scalable coder - G.729.1 - which has been recently standardized by ITU-T for wideband telephony and voice over IP (VoIP) applications. G.729.1 can operate at 12 different bit rates from 32 down to 8 kbit/s with wideband quality starting at 14 kbit/s. This coder is a bitstream interoperable extension of ITU-T G.729 based on three embedded stages: narrowband cascaded CELP coding at 8 and 12 kbit/s, time-domain bandwidth extension (TDBWE) at 14 kbit/s, and split-band MDCT coding with spherical vector quantization (VQ) and pre-echo reduction from 16 to 32 kbit/s. Side information - consisting of signal class, phase, and energy - is transmitted at 12, 14 and 16 kbit/s to improve the resilience and recovery of the decoder in case of frame erasures. The quality, delay, and complexity of G.729.1 are summarized based on ITU-T results.


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 2009

Unified speech and audio coding scheme for high quality at low bitrates

Max Neuendorf; Philippe Gournay; Markus Multrus; Jérémie Lecomte; Bruno Bessette; Ralf Geiger; Stefan Bayer; Guillaume Fuchs; Johannes Hilpert; Redwan Salami; Gerald Schuller; Roch Lefebvre; Bernhard Grill

Traditionally, speech coding and audio coding were separate worlds. Based on different technical approaches and different assumptions about the source signal, neither of the two coding schemes could efficiently represent both speech and music at low bitrates. This paper presents a unified speech and audio codec, which efficiently combines techniques from both worlds. This results in a codec that exhibits consistently high quality for speech, music and mixed audio content. The paper gives an overview of the codec architecture and presents results of formal listening tests comparing this new codec with HE-AAC(v2) and AMR-WB+. This new codec forms the basis of the reference model in the ongoing MPEG standardization activity for Unified Speech and Audio Coding.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 1997

ITU-T G.729 Annex A: reduced complexity 8 kb/s CS-ACELP codec for digital simultaneous voice and data

Redwan Salami; C. Laflamme; B. Bessette; J.-P. Adoul

This article describes the ITU-T Recommendation G.729 Annex A (G.729A) for encoding speech signals at 8 kb/s with low complexity. G.729A is the standard speech coding algorithm for multimedia digital simultaneous voice and data (DSVD). G.729A is bitstream interoperable with G.729; that is, speech coded with G.729A can be decoded with G.729, and vice versa. Like G.729, it uses the conjugate-structure algebraic code excited linear prediction (CS-ACELP) algorithm with 10 ms frames. However, several algorithmic changes have been introduced which result in a 50 percent reduction in complexity. This article describes the algorithm introduced to achieve the low complexity goal while meeting the terms of reference. Subjective tests showed that the performance of G.729A is equivalent to both G.729 and G.726 at 32 kb/s in most operating conditions; however, it is slightly worse in the case of three tandems and in the presence of background noise. A breakdown of the complexities of both G.729 and G.729A is also given.


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 2005

Universal speech/audio coding using hybrid ACELP/TCX techniques

Bruno Bessette; Roch Lefebvre; Redwan Salami

This paper presents a hybrid audio coding algorithm integrating an LP-based coding technique and a more general transform coding technique. ACELP is used in LP-based coding mode, whereas algebraic TCX is used in transform coding mode. The algorithm extends previously published work on ACELP/TCX coding in several ways. The frame length is increased to 80 ms, adaptive multi-length sub-frames are used with overlapping windowing, an extended multi-rate algebraic VQ is applied to the TCX spectrum to avoid quantizer saturation, and noise shaping is improved. Results show that the proposed hybrid coder has consistently high performance for both speech and music signals.


international conference on acoustics, speech, and signal processing | 1994

High quality coding of wideband audio signals using transform coded excitation (TCX)

Roch Lefebvre; Redwan Salami; Claude Laflamme; Jean-Pierre Adoul

This paper describes the application of transform coded excitation (TCX) coding to encoding wideband speech and audio signals in the bit rate range of 16 kbits/s to 32 kbits/s. The approach uses a combination of time domain (linear prediction; pitch prediction) and frequency domain (transform coding; dynamic bit allocation) techniques, and utilizes a synthesis model similar to that of linear prediction coders such as CELP. However, at the encoder, the high complexity analysis-by-synthesis technique is bypassed by directly quantizing the so-called target signal in the frequency domain. The innovative excitation is derived at the decoder by inverse filtering the quantized target signal. The algorithm is intended for applications whereby a large number of bits is available for the innovative excitation. The TCX algorithm is utilized to encode wideband speech and audio signals with a 50-7000 Hz bandwidth. Novel quantization procedures including inter-frame prediction in the frequency domain are proposed to encode the target signal. The proposed algorithm achieves very high quality for speech at 16 kbits/s, and for music at 24 kbits/s.<<ETX>>

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Bruno Bessette

Université de Sherbrooke

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Roch Lefebvre

Université de Sherbrooke

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Roch Lefebvre

Université de Sherbrooke

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Claude Laflamme

Université de Sherbrooke

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Guillaume Fuchs

Université de Sherbrooke

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