ESTIMATING ACOUSTIC DIRECTION OF ARRIVAL USING A SINGLE STRUCTURAL SENSOR ON A RESONANT SURFACE
Tre DiPassio (University of Rochester); Michael Heilemann (University of Rochester); Benjamin` Thompson (University of Rochester); Mark Bocko (University of Rochester)
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The direction of arrival (DOA) of an acoustic source is
a signal characteristic used by smart audio devices to enable
signal enhancement algorithms. Though DOA estimations
are traditionally made using a multi-microphone array, we
propose that the resonant modes of a surface excited by
acoustic waves contain sufficient spatial information that
DOA may be estimated using a singular structural vibration
sensor. In this work, sensors are affixed to an acrylic panel
and used to record acoustic noise signals at various angles
of incidence. From these recordings, feature vectors contain-
ing the sums of the energies in the panel’s isolated modal
regions are extracted and used to train deep neural networks
to estimate DOA. Experimental results show that when all 13
of the acrylic panel’s isolated modal bands are utilized, the
DOA of incident acoustic waves for a broadband noise signal
may be estimated by a single structural sensor to within ±5◦
with a reliability of 98.4%. The size of the feature set may
be reduced by eliminating the resonant modes that do not
have strong spatial coupling to the incident acoustic wave.
Reducing the feature set to the 7 modal bands that provide
the most spatial information produces a reliability of 89.7%
for DOA estimates within ±5◦ using a single sensor.