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Echo suppressor

 
Sci-Tech Dictionary: echo suppressor
(′ek·ō sə′pres·ər)

(electronics) A circuit that desensitizes radar navigation equipment for a fixed period after the reception of one pulse, for the purpose of rejecting delayed pulses arriving from longer, indirect reflection paths. A relay or other device used on a transmission line to prevent a reflected wave from returning to the sending end of the line.


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Computer Desktop Encyclopedia: echo suppression
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Turning off the receive side of a telephone conversation, effectively making the circuit one way (half-duplex). Echo suppressors were used to eliminate echo in satellite circuits before more sophisticated echo cancellation techniques could be deployed. See echo cancellation.

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Wikipedia: Echo suppressor
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An echo suppressor (sometimes "acoustic echo suppressor" / AES) is a telecommunications device used to reduce the echo heard on long telephone circuits, particularly circuits that traverse satellite links. Echo suppressors were first developed in the 1950s in response to the first use of satellites for telecommunications, but they have since been largely supplanted by better performing cancellers Acoustic Echo Cancelling

Echo suppressors work by detecting if there is a voice signal going in one direction on a circuit, and then inserting a great deal of loss in the other direction. Usually the echo suppressor at the far-end of the circuit adds this loss when it detects voice coming from the near-end of the circuit. This added loss prevents the speaker from hearing his own voice.

While effective, this approach leads to several problems:

  • Double-talk: It is fairly normal in conversation for both parties to speak at the same time, at least briefly. Because each echo suppressor will then detect voice energy coming from the far-end of the circuit, the effect would ordinarily be for loss to be inserted in both directions at once, effectively blocking both parties. To prevent this, echo suppressors can be set to detect voice activity from the near-end speaker and to fail to insert loss (or insert a smaller loss) when both the near-end speaker and far-end speaker are talking. This, of course, temporarily defeats the primary effect of having an echo suppressor at all.
  • Clipping: Since the echo suppressor is alternately inserting and removing loss, there is frequently a small delay when a new speaker begins talking that results in clipping the first syllable from that speaker's speech.
  • Dead-set: If the far-end party on a call is in a noisy environment, the near-end speaker will hear that background noise while the far-end speaker is talking, but the echo suppressor will suppress this background noise when the near-end speaker starts talking. The sudden absence of the background noise gives the near-end user the impression that the line has gone dead.

Echo suppressors cause effects that are frustrating for both parties to a call, although they do effectively deal with the echo. In response to this, AT&T Bell Labs developed echo canceler theory in the early 1960s, which then resulted in laboratory echo cancelers in the late 1960s and commercial echo cancelers in the 1970s.

In modern times, the main use of an AES (over an AEC) lies in the VoIP sector. This is primarily because AECs require a fast hardware (MHz), usually in the from of a Digital signal processor (DSP). For the PC market, and especially for the embedded VoIP market, this cost in MHZ comes at a premium. On embedded platforms, it is not-unusual to find a Wideband CODEC (such as AMR-WB / G.722) incorporated in place of an AEC. This said, many (embedded) VoIP solutions do have a fully functional AEC.

Examples of AES in VoIP include: "X-Ten Eyebeam", X-Lite and Skype.

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