6.2 NAMING CONVENTIONS IN ECHO CANCELLER

Naming conventions of the echo canceller are marked in Fig. 6.2. The echo canceller is represented as a four-terminal device connected in the receive and send voice path. Echo cancellation blocks and literature uses the names of Rin, Sin, LRES, Sout, and Sgen for representing the signals [ITU-T-G.168 (2004), ITU-T-G.161 (2004)]. Signal Rin is the reference signal coming from the far end. In the receive path, no modification for this signal Rin occurs. The signal coming out of EC in the receive path is marked as Rout. This signal is the same as Rin. The signal Rout is played on the speaker. Echo is created based on the Rout signal. The near-end signal is Sgen. During the near-end signal, the echo canceller will work as simply pass-through. The combined signal of echo and Sgen is the input Sin to the echo canceller. The echo canceller uses Rin as a reference and cancels echo present in Sin. The echo canceller first level removes the linear part at the summing junction and gives the nonlinear part and small uncancelled linear part as residue represented as LRES. The suffix “RES” denotes residue. In this book, SRES is used in place of LRES for easy identification of the send path. This residue is processed in nonlinear processor (NLP) to obtain a nonlinear echo removed signal denoted as Sout or LRET. The signal at Sout is expected to be combination of imperceptible echo and Sgen without any significant distortions. The returned echo level at ...

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