# Binaural LCMV Beamforming with Partial Noise Estimation

**Authors:** Nico G\"o{\ss}ling, Elior Hadad, Sharon Gannot, Simon Doclo

arXiv: 1905.04050 · 2020-11-12

## TL;DR

This paper introduces BLCMV-N, a novel binaural beamforming method that combines control over interfering source reduction with partial noise cue preservation, improving spatial impression and noise reduction trade-offs.

## Contribution

The paper proposes BLCMV-N, integrating advantages of BLCMV and BMVDR-N, with theoretical analysis and experimental validation for enhanced binaural cue preservation and noise reduction.

## Key findings

- BLCMV-N preserves binaural cues of interfering sources.
- BLCMV-N balances noise reduction and cue preservation.
- Experimental results confirm improved perceptual quality.

## Abstract

Besides reducing undesired sources (interfering sources and background noise), another important objective of a binaural beamforming algorithm is to preserve the spatial impression of the acoustic scene, which can be achieved by preserving the binaural cues of all sound sources. While the binaural minimum variance distortionless response (BMVDR) beamformer provides a good noise reduction performance and preserves the binaural cues of the desired source, it does not allow to control the reduction of the interfering sources and distorts the binaural cues of the interfering sources and the background noise. Hence, several extensions have been proposed. First, the binaural linearly constrained minimum variance (BLCMV) beamformer uses additional constraints, enabling to control the reduction of the interfering sources while preserving their binaural cues. Second, the BMVDR with partial noise estimation (BMVDR-N) mixes the output signals of the BMVDR with the noisy reference microphone signals, enabling to control the binaural cues of the background noise. Merging the advantages of both extensions, in this paper we propose the BLCMV with partial noise estimation (BLCMV-N). We show that the output signals of the BLCMV-N can be interpreted as a mixture of the noisy reference microphone signals and the output signals of a BLCMV using an adjusted interference scaling parameter. We provide a theoretical comparison between the BMVDR, the BLCMV, the BMVDR-N and the proposed BLCMV-N in terms of noise and interference reduction performance and binaural cue preservation. Experimental results using recorded signals as well as the results of a perceptual listening test show that the BLCMV-N is able to preserve the binaural cues of an interfering source (like the BLCMV), while enabling to trade off between noise reduction performance and binaural cue preservation of the background noise (like the BMVDR-N).

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04050/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04050