ADPCM Glossary


|   A - H   |    I - Z    |

This glossary defines important concepts, terms, and abbreviations related to ADPCM.  Please use your browser's "Find" function to locate the desired information. 


A through H

Definition of Terms I-P

ADPCM  Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation. ADPCM is a speech coding method that achieves bit rate reduction through the use of adaptive prediction and adaptive quantization. It is a reduced bit rate variant of PCM audio encoding. ADPCM increases the number of subchannels carried by a T-1 or DS-1 circuit and reduces the capacity in each subchannel to 4.8 Kbps. This allows analog voice signals to be carried on a 32 Kbps digital channel. Sampling is performed at 8 KHz with 3 or 4 bits used to describe the difference between adjacent samples.
A-Law The PCM voice coding and companding standard for European telephone networks. The analog signal is compressed from a 13-bit word and encoded into an 8-bit scheme composed of 7 bits for magnitude and 1 sign bit. The data rate for and individual voice channel when encoded using A-law technique is 8,000 samples per second X 8 bits per sample = 64,000 bits per second.
Companding Process of compressing a signal prior to transmission and expanding the signal at the receiver.
G recommendations A series of standards defined by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) covering transmission facilities.

G.723

An ITU-T Recommendation; Dual Rate Speech Coder for media communications transmitting at 5.3 and 6.3 Kbps. This Recommendation specifies a coded representation that can be used for compressing the speech or other audio signal component of multi-media services at a very low bit rate as part of the overall H.324 family of standards.
G.726 An ITU-T Recommendation; Coding of analogue signals by methods other than PCM using using 40, 32, 24, 16 Kbit/s adaptive differential pulse code modulation (ADPCM). Recommendation G.726 sets out the characteristics recommended for the conversion of a 64 kbit/s A-law or µ-law pulse code modulation (PCM) channel to and from a 40, 32, 24 or 16 kbit/s channel. The conversion is applied to the PCM bit stream using an ADPCM transcoding technique. Recommendation G.726 provides an outline description of the ADPCM transcoding algorithm including ADPCM encoding and decoding algorithms respectively.
G.726a Annex A to Recommendation G.726 (11/94) - Extensions of Recommendation G.726 for use with uniform-quantized input and output. Xilinx 32-Channel ADPCM core is not G.726a compliant.
H.324 Standard for analog POTS telephone line based videoconferencing via modems. H324 contains several standards for videoconferencing including G.723 for real-time audio compression/decompression.
I through Z

A-H

mu Law  The PCM voice coding and companding standard for North American and Japanese telephone networks. Generally know as µ-law, the analog signal is compressed from a 14-b word and encoded into an 8-bit scheme composed of 7 bits for magnitude and 1 sign bit. The data rate for and individual voice channel when encoded using µ-law technique is 8,000 samples per second X 8 bits per sample = 64,000 bits per second.
PCM  Pulse Code Modulation. A form of modulation in which information signals are sampled at regular intervals, and a series of pulses, coded to represent the amplitude of the information signal at the time of the sampling, are transmitted. PCM is the most common method to encode an analog voice signal into digital bit stream.

More Information
ADPCM FAQ's
Purchase & Registration Information

 
  Trademarks and Patents
Legal Information

Privacy Policy
| Home | Products | Support | Education | Purchase | Contact | Search |