Fraunhofer introduces multi-channel MP3

Fraunhofer introduces multi-channel MP3
Fraunhofer IIS and Agere Systems have developed a multi-channel MP3 format that produces 5.1 sound at bitrates comparable to those used today to encode stereo sound in MP3 format. In addition to offering multi-channel sound at low bitrates, the MP3 Surround -format is also fully backwards compatible with all existing MP3 players.

MP3 Surround technology encodes multichannel sound by transmitting a stereo audio signal that carries a compatible stereo down mix of the multi-channel material. The multi-channel sound image is created by additional side information, that characterizes the spatial distribution and attributes of the sound. Since the channel information is not discrete, the format cannot be compared to, for instance, Dolby Digital multi-channel audio.



"Enjoying personal multi-channel audio has been on the wish list of the MP3 user community for quite some time. This is exactly what MP3 Surround has to offer -- and it does so at astoundingly low bit rates", says Jürgen Herre, Chief Executive Scientist of the Audio & Multimedia departments of Fraunhofer IIS, Erlangen.

The most obvious solution for multi-channel, low-bitrate MP3 audio is in network distributed movies. First software implementations are expected to be available by mid 2004. Until then we can only guess how well MP3 Surround can perform.

Source: Fraunhofer IIS

Written by: Jari Ketola @ 16 Mar 2004 8:57
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  • 4 comments
  • pcshateme

    this is pretty cool, but AC3 does the same thing- but AC3 isnt compatible with mp3 players (most of them)

    16.3.2004 12:49 #1

  • Ketola

    As far as I know AC3 isn't capable of the kind of encoding that MP3 Surround utilizes. Ie. encoding the audio and spatial information separately. AC3 requires quite a bit of bandwidth to produce an adequate 5.1 soundscape. At least according to the hype, MP3 Surround sould be able to achieve similar results at considerably lower bitrates.

    We'll see..

    17.3.2004 13:19 #2

  • Daskins

    sounds kool though

    17.3.2004 17:42 #3

  • pbailey

    I noticed it mentioned use through network distributed movies, but, and correct me if i'm wrong (Australian without digital tv yet) doesn't the digital broadcast allow for the amount of data 5.1 discrete channels requires?

    I agree though, it does sound very interesting, can't wait to see what the quality is like.

    19.3.2004 15:55 #4

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