Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Visualisation, analysis, and annotation of music audio recordings. Sonic Visualiser is a free, open-source application for Windows, Linux, and Mac, designed to be the first program you reach for when want to study a music recording closely.
- Download
Don't forget your plugins! Analysis plugins: Oh yes, you'll...
- Videos
Videos about Sonic Visualiser. Mapping Melody Dan...
- Documentation
Documentation for Sonic Visualiser Reference Manual....
- News
Layer data can now be imported from RDF described using the...
- Screenshots
Sonic Visualiser 0.9 showing a waveform, beat locations...
- Tony
Download Tony. Tony is available ready-to-run for multiple...
- Features
Annotate audio data by adding labelled time points and...
- Community
Community and Developer Resources. All Sonic Visualiser...
- Download
22 Δεκ 2023 · Identifying the precise frequency of a sound, its timbral makeup, measuring how loud it is, peeking into its spatial properties, diagnosing concrete problems such as noise or distortion—these are some of the things that audio analysis tools are indispensable for.
21 Νοε 2018 · The tools I'm using (Colab, Pandas, etc.) excel at this kind of analysis. More interactive graphs: hide/show lines, tooltips Add sorting/filters settings for the speaker list (e.g. price) and improve the presentation (better use of space).
11 Ιουλ 2024 · An audio spectrum analyzer is a software tool used to measure and visualize the frequency spectrum of audio signals. It displays the magnitude of various frequency components within an audio signal, providing a graphical representation of sound energy distribution across the frequency range.
Plot Spectrum takes the selected audio (which is a set of sound pressure values at points in time) and converts it to a graph of frequencies (the horizontal scale in Hz) against amplitudes (the vertical scale in dB).
The dBmap.net Noise Mapping Tool is for modelling external sound propagation, calculating sound levels from sources of environmental and industrial noise and the screening effects of buildings and barriers.
They are designed to take raw noise data from any sound level meter and generate graphs for visual analysis and reporting. These graphs then become interactive making it easy to perform decibel calculations, add labels and inspect spectral data and audio.