pulsecode
Pulsecode is a term used in digital communications to describe the binary code word that represents a single sample in a pulse-code modulation system. In a typical PCM chain, an analog input is sampled at regular intervals; each sample is quantized to the nearest discrete level and then encoded as a binary word. The resulting sequence of code words forms a pulse-code stream suitable for transmission or storage.
Historically, pulsecode concepts emerged during the development of digital telephony in the mid-20th century, with early
Key characteristics include the sampling rate, the bit depth per sample, and the quantization law. Common configurations
Applications span telecom networks, broadcast audio, digital recording, and storage formats. PCM’s advantages include resilience to
In contemporary discourse, the term pulsecode is largely synonymous with PCM, though the specific phrase is