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Waitnoise

Waitnoise is a term used in audio production and digital signal processing to describe a brief, controlled burst of noise inserted into an audio stream during pauses, delays, or transitions. The purpose is to mask abrupt spectral or temporal gaps and preserve a sense of continuity for the listener.

The term is not universally standardized and appears mainly in informal discussions among sound designers, game

In practical use, waitnoise can cover latency from buffering, network jitter, or thread scheduling, or smooth

Implementation typically centers on several parameters: duration (ranging from a few milliseconds to tens of milliseconds),

See also: Noise masking, audio dithering, crossfading, gap filling, seamless looping.

audio
programmers,
and
some
DAW
users.
It
is
often
described
as
a
form
of
masking
noise
or
bridging
noise,
distinct
from
dither
or
background
ambience.
Waitnoise
can
be
generated
procedurally
or
drawn
from
a
precomputed
sample.
transitions
between
scenes
or
actions
in
interactive
media.
It
may
be
employed
during
loading
screens
or
when
an
actor’s
animation
lags
behind
audio,
to
reduce
perceptible
glitches.
In
music
production,
short
noise
bursts
can
serve
as
transitional
cues
or
to
add
texture
without
introducing
sustained
ambience.
spectral
content
(white,
pink,
or
filtered
noise),
amplitude
(kept
low
to
avoid
distraction),
and
envelope
shaping
(attack
and
release).
Trigger
logic
may
place
the
noise
onset
before,
during,
or
after
the
gap,
and
some
systems
adjust
loudness
to
maintain
consistent
perceived
levels
with
the
surrounding
audio.