Quantization (signal processing) Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In digital signal processing, quantization is the process of approximating a continuous signal by a set of discrete symbols or integer values; that is, converting an analog signal to a digital one. In general, a quantization operator can be represented as
In computer audio, a linear scale is most common. If x is a real valued number between -1 and 1, the quantization operator can therefore be alternately expressed as,
- .
In digital telephony, two popular quantization schemes are the 'A-law' (dominant in Europe) and 'µ-law;' (dominant in North America and Japan). These schemes map discrete analog values to an 8 bit scale that is nearly linear for small values and then increase logarithmically as amplitude grows. Because the human ear's perception of loudness is roughly logarithmic, this provides a higher signal to noise ratio over the range of audible sound intensities for a given number of bits.
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