Noiseshaping
Noise shaping is an audio processing technique used to improve the perceived quality of low-bitrate audio reproduction, particularly in digital systems with limited resolution. The method involves altering the frequency distribution of quantization noise—an inherent artifact of digital audio encoding—to make it less audible to human hearing. By emphasizing noise at frequencies where the human ear is less sensitive, noise shaping helps mask the distortion, resulting in a more natural sound despite the reduced bit depth.
The process typically employs a filter to attenuate noise in the mid-frequency range, where human perception
Noise shaping is commonly applied in digital audio interfaces, compact disc players, and low-bitrate codecs like