Echo Cancellation—A Likelihood Ratio Test for Double-Talk Versus Channel Change

  • Authors:
  • N.J. Bershad;J.-Y. Tourneret

  • Affiliations:
  • Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput., California Univ., Irvine, CA;-

  • Venue:
  • IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing
  • Year:
  • 2006

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Abstract

Echo cancellers (ECs) are in wide use in both electrical (four-wire to two-wire mismatch) and acoustic (speaker-microphone coupling) applications. One of the main design problems is the control logic for adaptation. Basically, the algorithm weights should be frozen in the presence of double-talk and adapt quickly in the absence of double-talk. The control logic can be quite complicated since it is often not easy to discriminate between the echo signal and the near-end speaker. This paper derives a log-likelihood ratio test (LRT) for deciding between double-talk (freeze weights) and a channel change (adapt quickly) using a stationary Gaussian stochastic input signal model. The probability density function (pdf) of a sufficient statistic under each hypothesis is obtained, and the performance of the test is evaluated as a function of the system parameters. The receiver operating characteristics (ROCs) indicate that it is difficult to correctly decide between double-talk and a channel change based upon a single look. However, postdetection integration of approximately 100 sufficient statistic samples yields a detection probability close to unity (0.99) with a small false-alarm probability (0.01)