Info
This question is closed. Reopen it to edit or answer.
Finding the strongest beat in a sound wave using autocorrelation
1 view (last 30 days)
Show older comments
I have a sound wave representing a piano piece played at a steady tempo, and would like to get a graph of the saliency of each beat. I understand that this is done by plotting the autocorrelation function, however I don't quite understand why a graph of r coefficients against each possible lag value (which is, as far as I udnerstand, the deffinition of an autocorrelogram) would have anything to do with beats.
The following code produces a graph that doesn't in any way suggest anything to do with the actual steady beat of the piece (60 BPM):
[y,Fs] = wavread('d:\bach.wav');
[r,lags]=xcorr(y,'coeff');
plot(lags,r)
Clearly I'm understanding autocorrelation wrongly. For instance, in this very simple example http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ed/Acf_new.svg, the frequency of the sine hidden in noise is nowhere visible from the autocorrelation graph - or is it? Furthermore, that frequency would actually be the pitch of the sound, and not any rhythm-related measure!
Anticipated thanks for any clarifications!!
2 Comments
Daniel Shub
on 26 Nov 2012
I am closing since this doesn't seem to be a MATLAB question, but rather an audio processing theory question.
Answers (1)
This question is closed.
See Also
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!