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The Circle Surround™ 5.2.5™ 5-Channel Surround
System
White Paper
by James K. Waller, Jr.
INTRODUCTION
Circle Surround was originally developed to offer the benefits of surround sound
for music applications that had been available for cinematic use for years.
There are side effects in the cinematic surround matrix systems that do not
provide a high quality format for music. After first addressing the requirements
of matrix surround for music, a video mode was developed which offers an
improved stereo image for the front, as well as stereo surround channels.
All Circle Surround designs to date have provided multi-band left/right
steering in the surround channels. In general, this has been accomplished by
splitting the L/R signal into multiple bands and steering each band to the left
or right surround channel based on the dominant left or right input signal
energy in that specific band. These systems are also capable of producing
simultaneous left and right stereo imaging (i.e. if the input signal contained
dominant mid band signal energy in the left input and dominant high band signal
energy in the right input, the resulting surround channels would provide mid
band information steered to the left, and high band information steered to the
right.). However, there has never been a matrix system available which provided
the ability to localize a specific broadband audio signal in the left or right
surround channel as an individual, independent sound source?at least, not until
now!
The Circle Surround 5.2.5™ surround matrixing system is the latest
improvement in RSP Technologies' patented Circle Surround sound processing
system. With the capabilities of the 5.2.5 system, it is now possible to encode
5 independent channels down to an LT/RT (stereo) signal, with the ability to
then decode those five signals as independent sound sources which can be fed to
any predetermined speaker location. Prior to the introduction of the Circle
Surround 5.2.5 matrix system, 4.2.4 matrix technology allowed only for the
decoding of a left, center, right or single surround signal as a dominant
channel. 5.2.5 now provides the capability to encode a left, center, right, left
surround or right surround signal as a dominant channel. Whether producing sound
for music, film or multimedia, this major breakthrough in matrix technology
greatly enhances the listening experience. In addition, the 5.2.5 system allows
for backward compatibility with all existing matrix formats, as well as normal
stereo material.
With the Circle Surround 5.2.5 system, it is now possible to produce audio
where sounds originate from the left or right surround channel, with 30dB of
separation to all other channels. Sounds can be panned from left or right front,
to the left surround or right surround position?independent of all other
channels. What this means is that the sonic impact of the discreet 5.1 digital
systems is achieved with full backward compatibility to all other matrix systems
and stereo.
Audio mixed on one of the 5.1 systems can only be played back on that exact
system, requiring a costly digital decoder in order to decode any audio. A
Circle Surround 5.2.5 mix can be decoded in Circle Surround 5.2.5 for full
five-channel impact. When decoded with other matrix systems (such as Dolby
ProLogic™), full compatibility is achieved. The left and right surround
information will appear in the mono surround channel, and the front channels (left,
center and right) play back as encoded. And, if 5.2.5 audio is played back
without any surround decoder, the mix allows for full stereo reproduction
without any sonic degradation. With the 5.2.5 breakthrough, the optical sound
track of motion pictures can now carry five channels of audio. The cinema
digital systems that use the film as the recording medium suffer from a common
problem of drop-out, where excessive data errors cause the system to immediately
switch to the optical sound track. This problem increases with the number of
times the film is shown. With a Circle Surround 5.2.5 soundtrack, the difference
between the digital soundtrack and that of 5.2.5 would be considerably less
noticeable than that of the digital sound and current film matrix soundtrack.
VHS video tape (which is the most commonly used storage medium for consumer
video) can also provide five channels of decodable audio, as well as radio,
television, and cable. Audio encoded in one of the other matrix formats can be
decoded with a 5.2.5 decoder and still provide stereo imaging in the surround
channels. However, this does not allow for precise placement of audio in one of
the independent surround channels.
Analog Devices is now producing Circle Surround 5.2.5 decoder ICs for OEM
applications in analog and soon, digital form.
Utilization of the complete Circle Surround system (both encode and decode)
allows audio engineers to place any voice, instrument or sound effect at any
predetermined location within the 360 degree radius surrounding the listener.
This white paper provides a brief background of surround sound matrix systems,
including discussion of some of the more common surround systems, followed by an
explanation of Circle Surround; its general operation, its advantages over other
systems, and recent improvements that have been made.
BACKGROUND
Methods of providing multidimensional sound for both film and music applications
have been in existence since the early 1960s. One of the original matrix systems
was developed by David Hafler, founder of Dynaco. Hafter's system was strictly a
passive decoder which decoded a standard stereo recording into four channels. In
the late 1960s, Peter Scheiber filed U.S. Patent No. 3,632,886, in which he
disclosed an encode/decode matrix system which was the basis of one of the major
competing formats for quadraphonic sound in the early 1970s. Of the many
attempts that have been made to introduce a multidimensional sound system, some
of the most notable are the several rival quadraphonic systems introduced in the
early 1970s. In hindsight, it is easy to see why the quadraphonic era was short?lived.
All of the systems introduced had considerable technical problems, and were
incompatible with one another. None of the systems had a good variety of
software available and, in addition, the public had to be persuaded to buy extra
speakers and power amplifiers. They did not work particularly well with non?encoded
material, as they suffered from adverse image wandering effects due to the
broadband gain riding implemented. Even so, the aforementioned Scheiber patent,
as well as his subsequent patent numbers 3,746,792 and 3,959,590, are the
patents cited by Dolby Laboratories for the Dolby Surround* system. In light of
this fact, it becomes evident that the original concepts of what has come to be
known as "Dolby Surround", as well as all other matrix systems, were
originally founded by Peter Scheiber in his efforts to develop a system for
quadraphonic audio use with phonograph records in the late 1960s and early
1970s.
As mentioned, the original passive decoding system accepted a standard stereo
signal and, from it, produced four signals which could each be fed to a speaker
located at specific position around the listener (as shown in Fig. 1).
Figure 1 - Basic Passive Decoding Matrix
The systems disclosed in the Peter Scheiber patents are known as 4.2.4 matrixes,
wherein four discrete signals are encoded into a two channel stereo signal. The
encoded signal can then be played back through a decoder to extract the original
four signals from the encoded two?channel stereo signal allowing each signal to
be fed to its intended speaker location (see Fig. 2).
Figure 2 - Encode/Decode Matrix
Although passive matrix systems are capable of providing infinite separation
between the left and right channels, as well as the front and rear channels, a
primary disadvantage lies in that such systems are only capable of approximately
3dB of separation between adjacent channels (i.e. left/center, center/right,
right/surround and surround/left). Due to this drawback, it was desirable to
develop a steered system, incorporating gain control and steering logic, to
enhance the perceived separation between channels. The inventions disclosed in
the U.S. Patents issued to Peter Scheiber also incorporate early implementations
of such technology, which is further discussed later in this paper.
CINEMATIC CONSIDERATIONS
Following the demise of quadraphonic sound, companies such as Dolby Laboratories
adapted the matrix scheme to cinematic applications in an attempt to provide
additional realism to feature films. However, the nature of the cinematic
listening environment requires that different criteria be met than would be
needed for 4-channel matrixed music applications. In cinematic applications, it
is desirable that character dialogue be localized to any characters shown on the
motion picture screen, therefore a center channel was incorporated to
exclusively provide dialogue which emanates from a speaker located behind the
screen. The need for a hard center channel with its own respective speaker (rather
than utilizing a phantom center within a stereo system) results from the need to
stabilize the center image for listening positions which are off to either side
of the theater. The left and right front channels provide stereo information and
sound effects, and the surround channel is used primarily for ambience and
effects.
Standard Surround Configuration
The standard Dolby ProLogic system in use for home theater applications utilizes
five speakers configured as left front, center, right front and left and right
surround (see Fig. 3).
Figure 3.Typical ProLogic Speaker Configuration
(However, the left and right surround speakers are both fed from the same
mono surround channel.) The steering logic of the system was designed
specifically for cinematic applications, where the main criteria was keeping
dialogue focused at the picture screen (i.e., in the center channel) and out of
the surround channel.
TYPICAL SURROUND OPERATION
Surround Channel
The surround channel of the ProLogic decoding system is derived by subtracting
L-R and feeding this mono difference signal to each of the rear surround
speakers. A limited 100Hz-7kHz bandwidth and a simplified implementation of
Dolby B noise reduction is applied to reduce any perception of sibilance
splattering in the surround channel. This is primarily due to the inherent grain
structure of the medium used for cinematic reproduction (i.e. optical soundtrack
on 35mm film). Today, high fidelity VHS tape is capable of far better balance
and frequency response than could be provided from an optical soundtrack on
motion picture film. In addition, the limited bandwidth is applied to the rear
channel due to the fact that the surround speakers often used in the typical
home theater system are very small, and not capable of reproducing any bass
information below 100 Hz.
.
Delay is also added to the surround channels to contribute to the Haas effect
(also commonly referred to as the "precedence" effect). This slight
time delay ensures that any leakage of dialogue that may unintentionally emanate
from the surrounds will still be perceived by the listener to originate from the
front channels. The actual delay time applied for this purpose is based on the
distance between the front and rear speaker locations, and is typically
calculated at 1 millisecond per foot.
Front Channels
The center channel of the ProLogic decoder is derived by adding L+R information
(i.e. all elements of the left and right channels are fed to the center
channel). The left channel is the pure left signal from the left stereo input,
while the right channel provides the pure right signal fed from the right stereo
input. However, the operation of the ProLogic decoder is such that, at any given
point in time, one channel is considered to be the "dominant" channel.
To accomplish this, the system monitors the level between front and surround,
and also between left and right. When a defined threshold has been exceeded,
anti?phase information is added to both the left and right channels from their
respective opposite channel to cancel out any center channel (L+R) information
that is present in the front left and right channels. This acts to increase the
separation between the left, center and right channels. While this technique
succeeds in removing the center channel information from the front left and
right channels, it also removes the bass components. Therefore, a 6dB/octave low
pass network is employed which adds low band information back into the left and
right front channels.
Conversely, the center channel is also configured such that hard left or hard
right detected input will result in an attenuation of the center channel.
Implementing a Surround Format for Music
With the added dimension and notable improvements that the surround environment
provides the film?viewing community, it would seem only natural to apply such
principles to music applications to greatly enhance the experience of listening
to music.
However, a number of significant drawbacks become apparent when attempting to
utilize a Dolby-style surround decoding system for exclusive music applications.
One such drawback is that the surround channel of the Dolby-style surround
decoder is mono and, as a result, the surround lacks any of the directional
realism of a common stereo recording. Automotive sound systems incorporating
four-speaker stereo have provided stereo operation in the rear channels for many
years. Therefore, attempting to implement a system providing mono surround
channel operation, such as Dolby, would be less than desirable. Add to this that
the surround channel of such systems also consists of primarily ambient
information ; thereby not providing the required bass response through the rear
speakers. Based on the fact that automotive sound systems derive the bulk of the
system's bass through the rear speakers, any attempt to adapt an audio surround
system to automotive applications requires that the bass emanates from the rear
speakers. It becomes obvious that such a system could not be applied to
automotive applications.
In addition to the shortcomings caused by the operation of the surround
channel, additional drawbacks are present due to the operating nature of the
front channels. A pronounced monophonic emphasis is produced across the front
three channels when music is played exclusively through a common decoder
designed for cinematic applications. Though this effect is not apparent when
monitoring exclusive dialogue (as would be found in a feature film), it is
unacceptable for the stereo imaging required for music related applications.
The operation of the Dolby-style adaptive matrix dictates that the system
produce a slight cancellation of signals in the left and right channels when
input signals are not steered hard left or hard right. This condition is always
present unless a hard left or hard right input is detected. Therefore, the
system is most often steered between a center-steered signal and the pure left
and right that is input to the system thus clouding the stereo imaging of the
front three channels and producing a decidedly more mono sounding front
soundfield.
In addition, the detection of a strong center channel input results in the
left and right channels suddenly converting to difference signals; thereby
producing undesirable image wandering effects across the front three channels,
as well as a mono left and right signal. This audible side effect is very
objectionable when listening to high fidelity music.
These numerous drawbacks clearly illuminate the fact that a different type of
surround system is required for music applications than has been commonly known
and used for cinematic applications.
THE ADVANTAGES OF CIRCLE SURROUND
Other surround system developers have come up with different designs to
essentially duplicate the end result of the Dolby system, striving for better
performance, better speed and channel separation. Circle Surround, however, was
developed under a different approach than any of these other systems. It was
developed to provide a multidimensional surround sound system specifically for
high fidelity audio applications. It was critical that the Circle Surround
system operate effectively with both encoded and non?encoded material. The
development of Circle Surround's "Cinema" mode for use with video
applications followed only after the system was perfected for use in audio
related applications.
All of the inherent disadvantages of implementing a Dolby-style surround system
for exclusively audio-based applications were addressed in the development of
the Circle Surround Music mode.
Surround Channel Operation -Music Mode
The surround channels of the Circle Surround system provide full bandwidth,
stereo operation. The 100Hz-7kHz bandwidth limitation is not applied, as Circle
Surround is most commonly used in music and home theater environments. The time
delay applied to the surround channels of typical surround systems can also act
to "smear" sounds between the front and surround channels. It is for
this reason that a time delay is not applied to the surround channels in the
Music mode of Circle Surround. The only condition in which it would be desirable
to apply a time delay to the rear channels in a music application would be when
a music system is installed in a very large venue (such as a dance club), where
the distance between front to rear speaker locations would require a time delay
to compensate for the time required for the sound to arrive to the listener from
the front vs. the surrounds.
When developing Circle Surround, it was critical that the system provide
surround channel directional steering without the necessity of adding any
artificial information (such as delays, reverb, phase correction or harmonics
regeneration) that was not already present in the original source material. Some
manufacturers of home theater equipment have recognized the need for a music
reproduction mode. Generally, artificial reverberation and/or delays are applied
to the surround channels to simulate the effects of rear reflections in a
performance hall. At best, such systems only add an artificial element to the
music which is simply not present in the recording and not intended by the
artist.
Other systems have attempted to provide directional surround channel steering
capabilities, but have done so using broadband steering designs. Under many
conditions, broadband steering is objectionable due to the unnatural pumping
effects inherently produced from such steering schemes. To help compensate for
this, these systems typically limit steering to something on the order of 10-15
dB.
Other methods have also been applied to enhance the performance of the
surround channels of surround systems. Lucasfilm's THX™ system, for example,
applies a "decorrelation" technique to the single monophonic surround
channel. This is accomplished by splitting the mono surround channel into two
signals and applying pitch shifting techniques to one or both of the channels.
Methods such as this produce unacceptable results for music applications, as
they merely detune information in the surround channels and still do not place
instruments in the left or right surrounds based on their location in the
original panoramic soundfield.
Therefore, it was critical that the system provide rear directional steering
without encountering the objectionable pumping effects perceived with a single
band system. This is accomplished by initially deriving a composite rear signal
by subtracting L-R. This L-R signal is divided into at least two of a two band
implementation of Circle Surround is a Linkwitz-Riley design with 24dB/octave
response and a crossover frequency of 2kHz. This ensures both good separation
between the bands as well as correct phase response at the crossover point. This
also allows the portion of the audio spectrum which contains most of the high
frequency transient and directional information to be processed with proper
speed and accuracy. The audible side effect of pumping is greatly diminished as
a result of steering the highs separate from the mids and lows. With an
instantaneous left band signal in the input, the high band portion of Circle
Surround will steer the rear high band to the left in approximately 500~ts. It
has been documented that the human ear acts as an integrator to signals in the
first millisecond, therefore was imperative that the system respond faster than
the ear to transients in order to provide the proper definition and
transparency. In complex music, the mids do not necessarily follow the high
frequency transients ; this means that the mids will steer based on the mid band
directional bias in the input audio. When a broadband system steers complex
audio to the left or right, the opposite channel will produce an absence of
audio across the entire spectrum; creating a "gated" effect and
increasing the perception of pumping. The multiband scheme of Circle Surround
eliminates this problem, as a high frequency left or right bias in the input
audio will not necessarily provide a mid band bias in the same direction. This
means that the mids will properly track the mid band bias and provide a correct
surround sound field without the objectionable pumping or "gated"
effect.
The typical method of producing the control signals to steer the surround matrix
uses a single capacitor charged positive for one directional dominance (such as
left) and will alternately charge the capacitor negative for the opposite
directional dominance (i.e. right). The Dolby matrix operates this way, using
two RC networks charging both positive and negative, with one network providing
a fast time constant, and the other providing a slow (or long) time constant to
help avoid the side effects of pumping (see Figure 4).
Figure 4. Dolby-style Time Constant Generator
Threshold detectors determine when there is a dominance signal present and
will switch in the fast time constant so as to improve steering speed. This
signal is fed to a polarity splitter which will produce a left output when the
voltage is positive on the capacitor, and will produce a right output when the
voltage is negative on the capacitor. Thus, the polarity splitter basically
functions as a half-wave rectifier to produce the left and right control voltage
from the single time constant. Another high end decoder design which utilizes
broadband rear steering implements what is referred to as the Servo Logic™
system. in this design, the broadband left/rear steering also uses a single
capacitor charged positive for one directional dominance and negative for the
opposite directional dominance. The design switches an analog switch on and off
to short out the resistor in the RC time constant circuit. The analog switch is
controlled by a PWM (Pulse Width Modulation) circuit which is modulated based on
the presence of a directional dominance signal. (The idea is to increase the
charging time constant so as to provide a faster response time, which is claimed
to be 3.5 milliseconds.) There is an inherent flaw in these designs which
greatly reduce their ability to steer fast enough to satisfy the requirements
for music. If, for example, a left dominance signal is detected (causing the
timing capacitor to charge positive corresponding to a 20dB increase in the left
input) and this was instantaneously followed by a right dominance signal, the
design flaw becomes apparent. At this instant, the system not only has to charge
the capacitor negative corresponding to the right dominance signal, but it also
has to overcome the positive charge associated with the original left dominance
signal. Thus, it becomes obvious that the actual time period may be several time
constants (upwards of 20 milliseconds) before the system can actually provide
the proper directional control for the matrix. By this time, the initial
transient and directional information is either incorrectly decoded or has been
smeared across the channels. This condition is not nearly as common in cinematic
productions as it is in music applications. Because Circle Surround was designed
for music applications first and cinema second, it was an initial design
requirement to eliminate this problem. This problem is solved by dividing the
rear channel steering into at least two steered bands, and processing each band
with a different and optimum time constant. In a broadband system, a fast time
constant (which is desirable for fast steering) can cause distortion due to VCA
control ripple??especially at low frequencies. Therefore a system with broadband
steering is limited to an attack that is slow enough to avoid control ripple or,
by design, has an inherent problem of intermodulation distortion. The Circle
Surround design solves this problem by steering in multiple bands. Thus, the
high band (typically above 2kHz) can provide an extremely fast attack time
without the concern for low frequency ripple causing distortion in the audio
signal, since the low frequency audio is steered separately. The low frequency
portion of the spectrum does not require an extremely fast time constant, since
the upper portion of the spectrum contains most of the initial transient
information.
The absence of dominant signal energy in the left or right input for a
specific band will result in the rear channel remaining mono in that band.
Virtually all other surround processors generate steering control signals by
monitoring the levels between left/right and between front/surround. These
control signals are then used to control the entire matrix for all four channels
(left, right, front and surround). However, the Circle Surround system
incorporates a circuit dedicated to generating the control voltages for the
surround steering independent of the front channels for improved performance.
The method of deriving directional information utilized by the Circle Surround
system also allows for localizing simultaneous images in the surround speakers,
such that predominant right mid band information will cause the mid band to
steer to the right while the high band can be simultaneously steered to the
left. The advantages derived due to the enhanced operation of the multiband
scheme provided by Circle Surround provides the perception that there are two
virtually discrete channels in the rear.
Figure 5. Simplified 3-band Circle Surround
Decoder
All Circle Surround systems currently available provide a three band system
in the rear, with at least two bands (mid and high) steered. Future systems may
provide greater rear channel resolution (i.e., a larger number of bands that are
steered in the rear channels) to further enhance the performance of Circle
Surround. A simplified block diagram of a typical 3-band Circle Surround Decoder
is shown in Fig. 5. It is recommended that speakers of the same type be used for
all channels, with equal power applied to all channels. It is also recommended
that all speakers be located at an equal distance from the listener for this
mode.
The 5.2.5 Decoding System
5.2.5 decoding is the latest improvement in Circle Surround technology. As
previously stated, the patent?pending 5.2.5 system allows audio engineers to
encode five discrete channels down to a 2-channel signal, then extract those
five channels during the decode process and place specific sounds at any one of
five or more predetermined locations as individual, independent sound sources.
Unlike a fully discrete digital system, signals can not be fed simultaneously
into all five channels with full separation. However, if encoded as a dominant
signal, a signal can be placed in any one of the five channels. The 5.2.5 system
does have a distinct advantage over fully discrete digital systems in that it is
backwardly compatible with all material produced with other matrix surround
systems, as well as normal stereo material.
Figure 6 on the following page discloses a simplified block diagram of the
steering control generator for an implementation of the 5.2.5 decoding system
which incorporates two steered bands for the surround channels.
Steering Control Generator
The Steering Control Generator monitors the audio in the input and, based on the
encoded dominance signals, produces the control signals to steer the VCAs in the
audio path so as to correctly position the audio signals in the soundfield. The
Steering Control Generator shown in Figure 6 can be viewed as three basic
sections: the upper section comprises the left/right It is recommended that
speakers of the same type be used for all channels, with equal power applied to
all channels. It is also recommended that all speakers be located at an equal
distance from the listener for this mode.
The 5.2.5 Decoding System.
5.2.5 decoding is the latest improvement in Circle Surround technology. As
previously stated, the patented 5.2.5 system allows audio engineers to encode
five discrete channels down to a 2-channel signal, then extract those five
channels during the decode process and place specific sounds at any one of five
or more predetermined locations as individual, independent sound sources.
Unlike a fully discrete digital system, signals can not be fed simultaneously
into all five channels with full separation. However, if encoded as a dominant
signal, a signal can be placed in any one of the five channels. The 5.2.5 system
does have a distinct advantage over fully discrete digital systems in that it is
backwardly compatible with all material produced with other matrix surround
systems, as well as normal stereo material.
Figure 6 on the following page discloses a simplified block diagram of the
steering control generator for an implementation of the 5.2.5 decoding system
which incorporates two steered bands for the surround channels.
Steering Control Generator
The Steering Control Generator monitors the audio in the input and, based on the
encoded dominance signals, produces the control signals to steer the VCAs in the
audio path so as to correctly position the audio signals in the soundfield. The
Steering Control Generator shown in Figure 6 can be viewed as three basic
sections: the upper section comprises the left/right high band surround steering
control generator, the middle section comprises the left/right low band surround
steering control generator, and the lower section comprises the front/back
steering control generator. We will begin by examining the operation of the
lower section (front/back steering) first.
Steering Control Operation
An L-R signal is fed to the input of filter F3, which provides a single-pole
high pass response with a corner frequency of 480Hz. This removes the bass and
very low mid band audio from the input to level detector L3 so that it can more
accurately track the dominance signal. In the analog implementation, all level
detectors produce the log of the absolute value of the input. Once filtered,
this provides a signal which is linear in volts per decibel. All of the voltage
controlled amplifiers also provide gain control which is linear in volts per
decibel. This provides easy?to?implement ratios for the control of gain. Thus,
the output of level detector L3 provides the log of the absolute value of the
high pass filtered input signal, which is then fed to the negative input of
differential amplifier A9.
An L+R signal is fed to filter F4, which is also a single-pole high pass with
a comer frequency of 480hz. Filter F4's output is fed to level detector L4,
which functions as described above. The output of detector L4 is fed to the
positive input of difference amp A9. With no audio at the input of the decoder,
the level detector outputs will be at the same potential (typically 0 volts).
Therefore, the output of A9 will also be at 0 volts. The output of differential
amplifier A9 will be positive?going when the input signal to the decoder
contains front dominance (center information), and negative?going when the input
signal contains rear dominance (surround information).
The output of differential amplifier A9 is fed to a single pole filter to
effectively filter off the ripple from the level detectors and provide a quasi
DC voltage. This DC voltage is then buffered and fed to fullwave rectifier FR3
and variable resistor VR3, which dynamically determines the time constant for
attack and release characteristics for the steering circuit. The buffered
outputs of amplifiers A9, A21 and A25 all feed full wave rectifiers to form a
composite DC signal representative of any present dominant signal in either the
left/right input or front/surround input. This composite DC signal controls the
variable resistor blocks VRI, VR2 and VR3 in the steering circuitry.
The Variable Timing Circuit
As stated, the filtered outputs of the differential amplifiers (A9, A21 and A25)
are each fed to fullwave rectifiers, and the quasi DC voltage at the output of
each fullwave rectifier controls the variable resistance which drives each
timing circuit. Effectively, the voltage applied to each variable resistor block
is determined by deriving the peak of the absolute value of the three filtered
outputs of difference amplifiers A9, A21 and A25. The output of each variable
resistance block feeds a capacitor tied directly to ground.. which sets the
initial time constant for attack and release. This is followed by a second
capacitor tied to ground, but fed through a series?connected resistor. When
there is a strong dominance signal present at the input, the resistance of
Variable Resistor Blocks VRI, VR2 and VR3 is equal to or less than the
resistance of the series resistor which feeds the second capacitor.
The value of the single capacitor is such that the resistance driving it
provides an extremely fast time constant. In the high band portion of Circle
Surround, this time constant can be fast enough to accurately position sound
based on transient information. Since this portion of the rear band steering
operates only in the high band, the potential impact of distortion is avoided.
In the low band steering and front/surround steering portions of Circle
Surround, the time constant is much larger so as to avoid ripple in the control
signal, which could result in distortion. However, it is obvious that the low
band portion does not require as fast of a time constant to provide proper
transient response as is required for the high band.
As the resistance of the variable resistance block increases, the second
capacitor and resistor become a greater factor in determining the time constant.
This provides a continuously variable time constant circuit that varies over
an extremely large range. Another advantage of this design is that, in IC form,
this circuit will only require a single pin for adding the time constant
capacitors.
The Center Voltage ( Cv)
The output of timing amplifier A 16 feeds diode D2 1, which provides a
positive-going output when the output of amplifier A 16 is positive (i.e.
dominant center channel information is present at the input), to provide center
steering voltage Cv. The Cv voltage controls the dynamic operation of the center
channel. When the output of amplifier A 16 is negative, it is inverted and fed
through diode D22, which provides the surround voltage Sv when there is dominant
surround information.
The Front LEFT and Front Right Voltages (FLV and FRO)
The Cv signal also feeds amplifier A 17, which generates the front voltages
with a gain of 1. 5. Resistor R17 is connected between the negative input of A
17 and the negative supply rail, thus producing a positive offset at the output
of A 17. With no front dominance signal present at the decoder input, this
offset is present. Diodes D9 and D 10 then provide the front steering voltages
FRV and FLV*
Pan Correction
In the cinerna mode of operation, the output of the front steering signal is
connected as a peak OR function with the output of pan correction amplifiers A21
and A20, which process the mid-band left and right steering signal. Amplifiers
A21 and A20 provide the proper volt/per/decibel response for front channel VCAs
to cancel audio panned from center to one of the front left or right channels.
This improves channel separation for panned audio signals across the front three
channels.
The Surround (Back) Voltage (BV)
The output of timing amplifier A 16 is also inverted and fed through diode D22
to produce the Sv steering voltage. The Sv signal is then processed by
exponential ratio circuit ERI to produce the Bv steering voltage. Exponential
ratio circuit ERI accepts the linear volts/dB response generated by dominant
surround (or back) signals and produces an exponentially increasing output
voltage. The Bv signal is used to determine the amount of attenuation that
occurs in the front channels when dominant surround information is present.
Generating 5.2.5 Steering Aspects
The 5.2.5 design uses a variable multiplier in the high band and low band
left/right steering generators which provides the 5.2.5 steering aspects. A
4.2.4 matrix system encodes the surround information as an equal amplitude
anti?phase signal that the decoder detects as dominant L-R information. By
causing a slight imbalance or amplitude bias in the L-R encoded signal, a 4.2.4
matrix decoder will still decode this signal as surround channel audio. The
Circle Surround 5.2.5 matrix will detect this left or right bias and decode the
audio as left or right surround. If the encoded L?R signal is exactly equal (as
with 4.2.4 encoding) the 5.2.5 matrix will detect this as dominant surround with
no left or right bias and produce a decoder output of equal amplitude in both
the left and right surround channels. This provides backward compatibility with
4.2.4 matrix encoded audio. If a 5.2.5 encoded signal contains a L-R signal with
a left amplitude bias of 1-3dB, the 5.2.5 decoder will detect this as dominant
surround with a left bias and decode this as left surround. The 5.2.5 decoder
can reproduce smoothly panned audio from one surround channel to the other, or
pan from one or both surround channels to the front channels with up to 60dB of
channel separation and 30dB of separation between the surround channels. The
variable multipliers in the left and right multiband steering circuits provide
variable gain of the left and right steering signals that control the VCAs in
the surround channels. The gain of the multipliers increase exponentially with
increasingly dominant surround signals, therefore only an encoded signal with
dominant surround information will cause the multipliers to increase the gain of
the steering signals. A dominant surround (or L-R) signal can only be present in
audio that has been encoded, therefore a stereo non?encoded signal can never
cause the variable multipliers to change gain. This means that excessive
steering or pumping is avoided. The quiescent gain of the multiband steering is
sufficient to produce stereo imaging in the surround channels, since signals
panned to the left or right in the stereo mix contain dominant left or right
audio at various frequencies. The Circle Surround decoder will accurately place
these signals in the correct surround channel based on their panoramic position.
As previously stated, 4.2.4 matrixed audio with dominant surround will appear in
both surround channels. However, there is an interesting result with some 4.2.4
encoded material. If the 4.2.4 mix contains a dominant surround signal with a
small amount of left or right front audio (such as might be encoded when
transferring a 5.1 mix to a 4.2.4 matrix mix), the 5.2.5 decoder will position
this surround audio with a left or right bias. The end result is that some 4.2.4
encoded material will decode in 5.2.5 with strikingly close performance to that
of the original 5.1 mix. The positional accuracy is not quite as good as it is
when encoded in 5.2.5, however it does point out yet another advantage of the
Circle Surround 5.2.5 decoding system. In many cases the sonic performance of
Circle Surround 5.2.5 may actually be better than that of the 5.1 digital
systems, especially those that operate at a bit rate of 384 kilobits per second.
At this bit rate if all channels were to simultaneously have nominal signal
level full bandwidth audio this allows approximately 76.8 kilobits per second
per channel. This is certainly not enough bits to support high quality audio.
Some of the 5.1 systems use a bit pool and allocate bits to the various channels
based on the audio level and bandwidth in the channels. This means that when
only a dominate front center channel is required most of the bits are available
to support the center channel data. To avoid audible degradation of the signal
most of these 5.1 mixes avoid high amplitude full bandwidth audio in all
channels. In fact most of the cinema soundtracks use the surround channels for
periodic left or right effect. With the capabilities of Circle Surround 5.2.5 in
most cases similar stereo surround impact can be realized without any concern
for sonic artifacts or audible degradation.
It should be noted that the DTS 5.1 system for laser disk and CD uses a
considerably higher bit rate and does not suffer from the previously described
problems and is therefore capable of simultaneous full bandwidth high level
audio in all channels.
Referring back to Figure 6, when increasing dominant surround information is
detected (i.e. when Sv increases), the voltage Sv is fed to Variable Multiplier
Control VC I which determines the gain provided by Variable Multipliers VM I and
VM2. When Sv is at 0 volts, the Variable Multipliers VM I and VM2 provide a gain
of .5 5. As Sv increases, Variable Multiplier Control VC I increases the gain of
variable multipliers VM I and VM2 to a maximum gain of 10x when the Sv signal
reaches a predetermined voltage. The gain factor of the variable multipliers
increases exponentially over a predetermined voltage range. However, Variable
Multiplier Control VC I clamps at a specified voltage, and therefore will not
allow any higher gain factor than 10x.
When a signal appears at the decoder input with dominant surround information,
the outputs of the difference amps for the left/right high band (A25) and
left/right low band (A2 1) are monitored to determine whether the left or right
signal is dominant. When a 1-3dB left or right surround dominance is detected,
it will then be amplified by as much as 10x to provide the proper steering to
the left or right surround channel. Therefore, the Variable Multipliers VM I and
VM2 simply provide an exponential function between the surround voltage Sv and
the multiplication factor over a given voltage range.
The 5.2.5 function can be defeated via switch SW2. When SW2 is closed, the Sv
signal from diode D22 is fed to Variable Multiplier Control VC1 and functioning
5.2.5 steering aspects are provided. When SW2 is open, an increasing surround
voltage (Sv) at the output of diode D22 does not produce any change in the
variable multipliers VM I and VM2, therefore the gain factor of both VM I and
VM2 remains constant at .5 5.
Split Band Left/Right Surround Steering
The left (L) and right (R) input signals are each divided into two steering
generation paths; a left/right high band path (the upper path shown in Figure 6)
and a left right low band path (the center path shown in Figure 6). In the upper
path, the L and R inputs are each processed by high pass filters F9 and F 10
which have a corner frequency of l6kHz, so that the upper path generates
steering signals based on the high band spectrum information of the input audio.
In the center path, the L and R inputs are each processed by band pass filters
F7 and F8, which provide a center frequency of 48OHz, so that the center path
generates steering signals based on the mid band information of the input audio.
The outputs of difference amplifiers A25 and A21 in the high and low band paths
are each fed to low pass filters to filter off ripple components from the level
detectors and provide a quasi-DC output. As stated previously, the outputs of
fullwave rectifiers FRI, FR2 and FR3 are summed to generate the control voltage
for the variable resistor blocks VRI, VR2 and VR3 for the three steering
generation paths.
Generating the High Band Surround Steering Voltages
The high band and mid band steering signals are also each processed by a
variable multiplier to provide 5.2.5 steering functions. In the high band, the
output of the variable multiplier VM1 is fed to variable resistor block VR I,
which generates dynamically-changing timing signals. These timing signals change
both attack and release characteristics based on a dominance signal detected in
the inputs to the Steering Control Generator.
After the timing signal is generated, the output of amplifier A 14 feeds diode D
17, which goes positive when the output of amplifier 14 is positive. Amplifier A
14 also is also inverted and fed to diode D 18, which goes positive when the
output of amplifier 14 is negative. When dominant right high band information is
present at the input, the output of amplifier A 14 will be positive, and a
positive voltage will be present at the output of D 17, thus providing a
positive response at the LHA output. The LHA output feeds the control port of a
VCA to attenuate the left high band when dominant right rear high band
information is present in the input. The positive voltage at the output of diode
D 17 is also inverted and multiplied by a factor of .2 to provide a negative
response at the RHG output. The RHG and LHG outputs clamp at .375 volts, which
means that a maximum gain of 3dB will be provided from the surround VCAs. The
RHG output feeds the control port of a VCA to increase the gain in the right
surround high band to a maximum of 3dB when dominant right surround high band
information is present in the input.
Conversely, when dominant left high band information is present at the input,
the output of amplifier A 14 will be negative, and a negative voltage will be
present at the output of D 17. However, the negative voltage at the output of
timing amplifier A 14 is inverted and fed through diode D 18 , thus providing a
positive response at the RHA output. The RHA output feeds the control port a VCA
to attenuate the right high band when dominant left surround high band
information is present in the input. The positive voltage at the output of diode
D 18 is also inverted and multiplied by a factor of .2 to provide a negative at
the LHG output. The LHG output feeds the control port of a VCA to increase the
gain in the left surround high band to a maximum of 3dI3 when dominant left
surround high band information is present in the input.
Generating the Low Band Surround Steering Voltages
In the low band steering generator path, the filtered output from difference
amplifier A21 is first fed to variable resistor block VR2 and the timing circuit
prior to variable multiplier VM2. This is done so that pan correction and the
R/L steering voltage can be generated prior to applying the variable gain block
of variable multiplier VM2.
Note: As previously described, pan correction correct sfor signals that are
panned ftom center through to left or center through to right, and cancels that
signal out of the opposite channel over the pan until the channel that is being
panned to becomes the dominant channel.
Dominant right mid band information at the input will cause the output of
difference amplifier A21 to be positive. Therefore, the output of timing
amplifier A 15 will also be positive. After being fed through variable
multiplier VM2, the positive signal is fed to amplifier A 10 to provide the
proper V/dB response at the surround low band outputs. This positive voltage
from amplifier A 10 is then fed through diode D 19, which then provides a
positive response at the LLA output. The LLA output feeds the control port of a
VCA to attenuate the left low band when dominant right rear low band information
is present in the input. The positive voltage at the output of diode D 19 is
also inverted and multiplied by a factor of .2 to provide a negative response at
the RLG output. This signal also clamps at .375V to provide a maximum of 3dB
attenuation. The RLG output feeds the control port of a VCA to increase the gain
in the right surround low band when dominant right surround low band information
is present in the input.
Conversely, when dominant left low band information is present at the input,
the output of amplifier A10 will be negative, and a negative voltage will be
present at the output of D 19. However, the negative voltage at the output of
gain amplifier A 10 is inverted and fed through diode D20 - thus providing a
positive response at the RLA output. The RLA output feeds the control port of a
VCA to attenuate the right low band when dominant left surround low band
information is present in the input. The positive voltage at the output of diode
D20 is also inverted and multiplied by a factor of .2 to provide a negative
response at the LLG output. The LLG output feeds the control port of a VCA to
increase the gain in the left surround low band to a maximum of 3dB when
dominant left surround low band information is present in the input.
The outputs of A20 and A21 are peak detected by diodes D13 and D14 to produce
and R/L output signal. The R/L output will be positive-going when either a left
or right dominance signal is present at the input. The R/L output will be OV
when a front or surround dominance is detected. The R/L signal is fed to a VCA
which attenuates the center channel when dominant left or right information is
detected.
The R/L signal is also applied to a VCA which attenuates the surround channels
when a dominant left or right input signal is detected. This allows signals
panned hard left or hard right to remain in the front channels.
Auto Balance Requirements
Due to the nature of the 5.2.5 system, greater accuracy for automatic balancing
is required than for previous designs. 5.2.5 Decoders for consumer applications
monitor the input for differences in encoded left and right surround signal
levels of only 1-3dB. As a result of this requirement, the 5.2.5 system uses a
feed-forward auto balance design. Previous designs for automatic balancing have
been implemented as feed-back designs, which have limited range accuracy. The
use of the feed-forward method allows for balancing within roughly .25dB over a
±5dB range.
Front Channel Operation / Music Mode
Due to the de-emphasis of the stereo image and the image wandering effects
produced by the steering scheme of the common decoders, it was imperative that
the left and right channels of the Circle Surround system remain unaltered. Like
the other systems, the center channel signal consists of L+R information.
However, Circle Surround incorporates a dynamic center channel; where strong,
predominant center channel information results in the center channel level
increasing to unity gain. If a strong center signal is not detected, the center
channel level is reduced by as much as 10dB to avoid collapsing the stereo
imaging of the left and right front channels. Input signals panned hard to the
left or right will cause the center channel to steer down completely to
eliminate any collapse toward center of signals panned hard left or right. When
used in a four speaker configuration without a dedicated center channel, center
channel information is divided equally between the left and right front
channels. However, the center channel still operates dynamically in such a
configuration. (Automotive applications may require a configuration such as
this.)
A signal panned hard to surround will result in the attenuation of the left and
right front channels to provide a dominant signal in the surround channels.
Note: There is no broadcast compatibility for signals that are located fully
in the surround, since they are out-of-phase and cancel out of the L+R
monophonic signal. They can be used to good effect on programs that will never
be broadcast, such as trade shows. In music or cinema productions, hard surround
signals should only be used for non?essential audio (such as sound effects).
This provides the producer additional potential directional impact (for
effect only) for signals panned hard to the surround position in the absence of
any other audio. Anti-phase information in the left and right channels does not
appear in the center channel, therefore center channel steering is not required.
No objectionable impact will be apparent due to these steering characteristics,
as this steering condition will only occur under a hard surround pan which can
only be achieved when intentionally encoding material to take advantage of this
particular feature. The incorporation of the dynamic center channel, coupled
with the pure, unaltered left and right channels, results in a very stable front
sound stage where the stereo imaging is not adversely affected even in the
presence of diffuse, non-correlated audio. Thus, all the benefits of having a
center speaker are gained without destroying the normal stereo image.
Circle Surround Video/Cinema Mode
Although Circle Surround was initially developed as a surround system for music
applications, it also provides a Video mode for Cinematic use. The Circle
Surround Video mode also provides additional improvements over the standard
surround systems. An 18dB per octave low pass network is applied to the front
channels to maintain a stable low band when steering is taking place. Though
other systems typically utilize a 6dB per octave low pass network for this
purpose, an l8dB per octave network is implemented to attenuate mid band
dialogue information to a greater level in the left and right front channels.
As previously mentioned, the Dolby system has been designed to provide a single
dominant channel at any point in time. As a result, the front soundfield tends
to collapse towards center instead of maintaining a wide stereo front image.
Coupled with the fact that the rear channel is mono, this produces a very
one-dimensional soundfield which goes almost directly from front to rear. As
previously stated, this is due the fact that the Dolby matrix produces a slight
cancellation of the signals in the left and right channels when it is not
steered hard left or hard right. Therefore, even in cinema applications where
program material contains stereo background music information, the system will
collapse toward center and produce a notably narrower soundfield than would be
derived with a normal stereo signal. Circle Surround has been designed to avoid
this drawback and provide full high fidelity left and right stereo information
under conditions where a dominant center signal, or a dominant left or right
signal, is not present.
The center channel operates dynamically, as described in the Music mode, so as
to avoid collapsing any stereo imaging that may be present toward the center
channel. The center channel level rises to unity gain only under hard center
conditions, and attenuates under conditions involving stereo music in the
background of a cinematic production. This works to maintain a wide left/right
soundfield in the front channels.
The Circle Surround 5.2.5 decoding system provides noticeable performance
benefits over other decoding systems; even when used with conventional 4.2.4
surround encoded material. Even though the surround channel of conventionally
encoded source material is mono, the Circle Surround Decoder maintains the
ability to often extract independent left and right surround signals. When 4.2.4
encoded material is panned strong to the surround position, and a portion of the
signal is also slightly panned to the left or right front channel, the 5.2.5
Decoder will respond by directing the surround signal to the left or right rear
channel. The Circle Surround decoder does not apply any bandwidth limitations to
the rear channels, or the modified Dolby B noise reduction. The system is also
compatible with any of the 2-channel enhancement formats, such as Qsound™ or
the Roland RSS™ system.
The 5.2.5 Encoding System
Although the 5.2.5 decoding system can be used with material produced with any
other matrix system, as well as standard stereo material, it is most effective
when used with material specifically encoded as 5.2.5 surround material.
Figure 7 discloses an encoder which accepts five discrete signals and encodes
them down to a two-channel LT/RT signal. The surround left (SO and surround
right (SR) inputs each feed identical all-pass filters (F2 and F3), which have
been modified to provide a 90 degree phase shift at all frequencies from F I and
F4. The surround left audio (SO, after being processed by filter 172, is fed to
summing amplifier A3. Summing amplifier A3 sums the surround information
in-phase with both the left information from the output of F I as well as with
the output of VCA V I to produce the composite LT output. The output of filter
F2 also feeds VCA V2, which controls the gain of the surround left (SO audio
that is fed to summing amplifier A4.
VCAs V I and V2 dynamically change the gain to provide a variable level from
-3dB to -6dB to amplifiers A3 and A4.
The surround left (SL)and surround right (SR) signals are also fed to a
processing circuit (Surround Encode Positional Bias Generator), which generates
the controls signal for VCAs V I and V2. Depending on a surround left or
surround right dominance, the Surround Encode Positional Bias Generator will
determine the proper gain of the VCAs to provide proper encoding of the bias
signal for the composite LT/RT Output'
By providing the 90 degree phase shift for filters F2 and F3, a signal fed
simultaneously to a surround input (SL or SO and the right input (R),
cancellation of the input signal will not occur at summing amplifier A4. Without
processing these signals through the all?pass networks, signals that appear in
both a surround channel and the right channel would cancel.
This technique allows for the encoding of an L-R signal wherein the left or
right surround information Circle Surround 5.2.5 is the pinnacle of evolution in
surround matrix technology, offering tremendous benefits to the high-end audio
community. In addition, Circle Surround also furthers the performance previously
available from surround matrix decoders for video applications.
The Circle Surround system was co-developed by Derek Bowers, who also devised
the original concepts of the system, and worked through the development of the
system to its current embodiment.
The Circle Surround 5.2.5™ system is currently covered by U.S. Patents
#5,319,713 and #5,333,201, with other patents pending and foreign patents
pending on both the Circle Surround encode and decode processes.
* Dolby Stereo®R, Dolby Surround and Dolby Prologic are
trademarks of Dolby Laboratories Licensing Corporation, and are in no way
affiliated with Rocktron Corporation. QSound is a registered trademark of QSound
Labs, Inc. RSS is a registered trademark of Roland THX is a registered trademark
of Lucasfilm Ltd. Circle Surround is a trademark of SRS Labs, inc. Santa Ana,
CA.
Copyright 1996 by Rocktron Corporation. All rights reserved Printed in the
United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright
Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any
form or by any means, or stored in a data base or retrieval system, without the
prior written permission of the publisher.
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