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Keywords = audibility analysis

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24 pages, 613 KiB  
Review
Investigating the Effectiveness of Buccal Flap for Velopharyngeal Insufficiency: A Systematic Review Article
by Amr Youssef Arkoubi
J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14(8), 2593; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14082593 - 10 Apr 2025
Viewed by 469
Abstract
Background: Velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) is a failure of the sphincter mechanism, causing speech patterns like hypernasality and decreased intelligibility. Causes include structural, neurologic, and mechanical issues. Treatment options include non-surgical and surgical interventions, but complications can arise. A new approach using the [...] Read more.
Background: Velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) is a failure of the sphincter mechanism, causing speech patterns like hypernasality and decreased intelligibility. Causes include structural, neurologic, and mechanical issues. Treatment options include non-surgical and surgical interventions, but complications can arise. A new approach using the buccal flap (BF) has been suggested for palatal length augmentation. This systematic review assessed speech outcomes after BF palatal lengthening. Methods: A thorough investigation was conducted by methodically reviewing numerous databases, including PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase, until December 2024. The goal of our analysis was to find studies that assess the short- and long-term efficacy of BF on speech outcomes on patients with VPI. We used the NIH Quality Assessment Tool to assess the quality of the evidence, ensuring the dependability of the results reached during these investigations. Results: This systematic review identified 23 studies (total sample size of 995) that assessed the speech outcomes of BF on VPI. The BF significantly improves speech outcomes in patients with VPI. Hypernasality improved significantly post-surgery, with outcomes measured using different scales and methods, including both subjective and objective tools. Benefits were observed within three months postoperatively, with sustained benefits up to 15 months in several studies. Speech intelligibility also improved notably, with mean differences up to 1.09 (p < 0.001). Reductions in audible nasal air emissions were observed, though some variability was noted across studies. Secondary outcomes, including better velopharyngeal closure and decreased facial grimacing, further highlight its efficacy. However, inconsistent findings for nasal turbulence and limited long-term data suggest that benefits may plateau over time. These findings support the BF as an effective intervention, though further research is needed on extended outcomes. Conclusions: BF is an effective surgical intervention for VPI, significantly improving hypernasality, speech intelligibility, and audible nasal air emissions. While benefits are evident across diverse populations, long-term outcomes and secondary features, such as nasal turbulence, show variability, emphasizing the need for individualized approaches and continued follow-up. This technique offers a reliable option for functional and speech rehabilitation, though further research is needed to optimize its long-term efficacy and broader outcomes. Full article
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24 pages, 24145 KiB  
Article
Influence of Conductor Temperature on the Voltage–Current Characteristic of Corona Discharge in a Coaxial Arrangement—Experiments and Simulation
by Kayumba Grace Ilunga, Andrew Graham Swanson, Nelson Ijumba and Robert Stephen
Energies 2025, 18(5), 1303; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18051303 - 6 Mar 2025
Viewed by 598
Abstract
High-current-carrying capability with minimum thermal elongation is one of the key reasons for using high-temperature low-sag (HTLS) conductors in modern power systems. However, their higher operational temperature can significantly affect corona discharge characteristics. Corona is one of the key factors in transmission line [...] Read more.
High-current-carrying capability with minimum thermal elongation is one of the key reasons for using high-temperature low-sag (HTLS) conductors in modern power systems. However, their higher operational temperature can significantly affect corona discharge characteristics. Corona is one of the key factors in transmission line design considerations. Corona discharge is the leading cause of audible noise, radio interference, and corona loss in power transmission systems. The influence of conductor temperature on corona discharge characteristics is investigated in this paper using experimental methods and computational simulations. A simulation framework has been developed in COMSOL Multiphysics using the physics of plasmas and electrostatics to simulate corona plasma dynamic behavior and electric field distribution. The results show that the conductor temperature enhances the ionization by electron impact, enhances the production of positive and negative ions, changes the electric field distribution, and increases the electron temperature. This analysis emphasizes that temperature-dependent conditions affect the inception and intensity of corona discharge. Additionally, an experimental model was developed to evaluate corona voltage–current characteristics under varying temperature conditions. The study presents both simulation results and a newly developed model for predicting corona current at high conductor temperatures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section F3: Power Electronics)
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26 pages, 13142 KiB  
Article
Introducing Silencers on Micro Turboshafts Powering Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
by Andrei-George Totu, Cristian Olariu, Marius Deaconu, Laurențiu Cristea, Luminița Drăgășanu and Constantin Sandu
Acoustics 2024, 6(4), 1154-1179; https://doi.org/10.3390/acoustics6040063 - 16 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1023
Abstract
The transition to alternative electrical energy solutions for drone propulsion systems presents several challenges, particularly in managing noise. This noise, compounded by that from the propellers, can produce spectra that are either unpleasant to humans or detrimental to mission objectives. This study explores [...] Read more.
The transition to alternative electrical energy solutions for drone propulsion systems presents several challenges, particularly in managing noise. This noise, compounded by that from the propellers, can produce spectra that are either unpleasant to humans or detrimental to mission objectives. This study explores potential solutions to mitigate noise produced by a micro turboshaft engine, focusing on the solutions’ impact on weight, power output, and acoustic level. We propose two modular, scalable designs—one for the intake and one for the exhaust—based on well-known applications in cold and hot flows. These designs aim to operate effectively across the audible frequency spectrum and incorporate various Helmholtz resonator geometries, including combinations of different lengths, perforated metal sheet parameters, and cavity-filling materials, to enhance bandwidth and noise reduction. Experimental results indicate that these designs can achieve tonal noise reductions of up to 40 dB. While the results are promising, further analysis is required to evaluate the practical applicability and comprehensive impact of these solutions on drone performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Machinery Noise: Emission, Modelling and Control)
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39 pages, 6630 KiB  
Article
‘No’ Dimo’ par de Botella’ y Ahora Etamo’ Al Garete’: Exploring the Intersections of Coda /s/, Place, and the Reggaetón Voice
by Derrek Powell
Languages 2024, 9(9), 292; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9090292 - 30 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1950
Abstract
The rebranding of reggaetón towards Latin urban has been criticized for tokenizing Afro-Caribbean linguistic and cultural practices as symbolic resources recruitable by non-Caribbean artists/executives in the interest of profit. Consumers are particularly critical of an audible phonological homogeneity in the performances of ethnonationally [...] Read more.
The rebranding of reggaetón towards Latin urban has been criticized for tokenizing Afro-Caribbean linguistic and cultural practices as symbolic resources recruitable by non-Caribbean artists/executives in the interest of profit. Consumers are particularly critical of an audible phonological homogeneity in the performances of ethnonationally distinct mainstream performers, framed as a form of linguistic minstrelsy popularly termed a ‘Caribbean Blaccent’ that facilitates capitalization on the genre’s popularity by tapping into the covert prestige of distinctive phonological elements of Insular Caribbean Spanish otherwise stigmatized. This work pairs acoustic analysis with quantitative statistical modeling to compare the use of lenited coronal sibilant allophones popularly considered indexical of Hispano-Caribbean origins in the spoken and sung speech of four of the genre’s top-charting female performers. A general pattern of style-shifting from interview to sung speech wherein sibilance is favored in the former and phonetic zeros in the latter is revealed. Moreover, a statistically significant increased incidence of [-] across time shows the most recent records to uniformly deploy near-categorical reduction independent of artists’ sociocultural and linguistic backgrounds. The results support the enregisterment of practices popularized by the genre’s San Juan-based pioneers as a stylistic resource—a reggaetón voice—for engaging the images of vernacularity sustaining and driving the contemporary, mainstream popularity of música urbana. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Interface between Sociolinguistics and Music)
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12 pages, 229 KiB  
Article
“And the Script Sounds”: Literary Hermeneutics and Imaginary Listening
by Rolf J. Goebel
Humanities 2024, 13(4), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13040107 - 19 Aug 2024
Viewed by 1547
Abstract
Friedrich Hölderlin’s late hymns Patmos (first version) and Mnemosyne (early draft) create an intriguing tension between the “solid letter” that must be deciphered faithfully and the evocation of a “sounding script” that, together with an equally enigmatic “echo”, refuses direct hermeneutic understanding. At [...] Read more.
Friedrich Hölderlin’s late hymns Patmos (first version) and Mnemosyne (early draft) create an intriguing tension between the “solid letter” that must be deciphered faithfully and the evocation of a “sounding script” that, together with an equally enigmatic “echo”, refuses direct hermeneutic understanding. At the point where the reader’s interpretive desire threatens to fail, musical settings like Peter Ruzicka’s MNEMOSYNE: Remembrance and Forgetting can be listened to as an attempt to actualize what Hölderlin’s original writing must leave unrealizable: the presence of real sound. In this audio-hermeneutic transfer, the act of listening opens up possibilities of the audible that are promised by the literary text without being actualized. The present essay interrogates this intermedial translatability between letter and sound by isolating a few selected passages from the facsimile reproduction of Hölderlin’s palimpsestic manuscript of multiple revisions, as provided by the Frankfurter Ausgabe. Mindful of the discontinuities and gaps in the original poems, my own analysis foregrounds its own fragmentary mode of reading Hölderlin’s poetry and listening to Ruzicka’s music. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Hölderlin and Poetic Transport)
24 pages, 8466 KiB  
Article
An Extensive Parametric Analysis and Optimization to Design Unidimensional Periodic Acoustic Metamaterials for Noise Attenuation
by Mohamed Shendy, Momoiyioluwa Oluyemi, Nima Maftoon and Armaghan Salehian
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(16), 7272; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14167272 - 19 Aug 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1529
Abstract
The presented research delineates an extensive study aimed at obtaining and comparing optimal designs and geometries for one-dimensional periodic acoustic metamaterials to attenuate noise within the audible frequency range of 20 Hz to 20 kHz. Various periodic designs, encompassing diverse geometric parameters and [...] Read more.
The presented research delineates an extensive study aimed at obtaining and comparing optimal designs and geometries for one-dimensional periodic acoustic metamaterials to attenuate noise within the audible frequency range of 20 Hz to 20 kHz. Various periodic designs, encompassing diverse geometric parameters and shapes—from Basic-Periodic to Semi-Periodic, Tapered-Diverging, and Tapered-Converging unit cells of repeated patterns—are examined to identify the most effective configurations for this application. A thorough parametric analysis is executed employing FE-Bloch’s theorem across these four configurations to determine their bandgaps and to identify the most effective geometry. A normalization process is utilized to extend the domain of the analysis and the range of the system parameters studied in this work, totaling 202,505 design cases. Finally, the optimal design is identified based on achieving the best bandgaps coverage. The study concludes with the presentation of frequency domain acoustic pressure responses at multiple sensing points along the filters, validating the performance and the obtained bandgaps through these optimal geometries. Full article
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13 pages, 755 KiB  
Article
Factors to Describe the Outcome Characteristics of a CI Recipient
by Matthias Hey, Kevyn Kogel, Jan Dambon, Alexander Mewes, Tim Jürgens and Thomas Hocke
J. Clin. Med. 2024, 13(15), 4436; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13154436 - 29 Jul 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 920
Abstract
Background: In cochlear implant (CI) treatment, there is a large variability in outcome. The aim of our study was to identify the independent audiometric measures that are most directly relevant for describing this variability in outcome characteristics of CI recipients. An extended audiometric [...] Read more.
Background: In cochlear implant (CI) treatment, there is a large variability in outcome. The aim of our study was to identify the independent audiometric measures that are most directly relevant for describing this variability in outcome characteristics of CI recipients. An extended audiometric test battery was used with selected adult patients in order to characterize the full range of CI outcomes. Methods: CI users were recruited for this study on the basis of their postoperative results and divided into three groups: low (1st quartile), moderate (medium decentile), and high hearing performance (4th quartile). Speech recognition was measured in quiet by using (i) monosyllabic words (40–80 dB SPL), (ii) speech reception threshold (SRT) for numbers, and (iii) the German matrix test in noise. In order to reconstruct demanding everyday listening situations in the clinic, the temporal characteristics of the background noise and the spatial arrangements of the signal sources were varied for tests in noise. In addition, a survey was conducted using the Speech, Spatial, and Qualities (SSQ) questionnaire and the Listening Effort (LE) questionnaire. Results: Fifteen subjects per group were examined (total N = 45), who did not differ significantly in terms of age, time after CI surgery, or CI use behavior. The groups differed mainly in the results of speech audiometry. For speech recognition, significant differences were found between the three groups for the monosyllabic tests in quiet and for the sentences in stationary (S0°N0°) and fluctuating (S0°NCI) noise. Word comprehension and sentence comprehension in quiet were both strongly correlated with the SRT in noise. This observation was also confirmed by a factor analysis. No significant differences were found between the three groups for the SSQ questionnaire and the LE questionnaire results. The results of the factor analysis indicate that speech recognition in noise provides information highly comparable to information from speech intelligibility in quiet. Conclusions: The factor analysis highlighted three components describing the postoperative outcome of CI patients. These were (i) the audiometrically measured supra-threshold speech recognition and (ii) near-threshold audibility, as well as (iii) the subjective assessment of the relationship to real life as determined by the questionnaires. These parameters appear well suited to setting up a framework for a test battery to assess CI outcomes. Full article
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10 pages, 191 KiB  
Article
Fragments and Lies
by Eugenie Brinkema
Philosophies 2024, 9(4), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9040105 - 11 Jul 2024
Viewed by 1261
Abstract
This article considers the formal and critical consequences of organizing an aesthetic corpus around the philosophical concept of the fragment via a reading of Aryan Kaganof’s “Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers” (1994). This experimental video sets spoken accounts from [...] Read more.
This article considers the formal and critical consequences of organizing an aesthetic corpus around the philosophical concept of the fragment via a reading of Aryan Kaganof’s “Ten Monologues from the Lives of the Serial Killers” (1994). This experimental video sets spoken accounts from the perspective of the likes of Ted Bundy and Charles Manson alongside grainy, ambiguous imagery. Instead of thematic meditations on violence, the monologues circle around quasi-nostalgic reflections on the past and the nature of identity. The film frustrates any language of formal analysis that would rely on accounting for what is present in the film, instead proposing a sympathy with poststructuralism’s efforts at displacing the metaphysics of appearance. Violence is not what resides ready-made within the work, nor is it reducible to the realm of the visible or the audible, but is an unstable process bound up with the act of reading itself. The fragment as a formal problem holds out the abstract, general notion of a break in ways that compel a rethinking of violence as something impersonal, rhythmic, and grammatical. Full article
15 pages, 5187 KiB  
Article
The Use of Polyimide as a Bonding Material to Improve the Mechanical Stability, Magnetic and Acoustic Properties of the Transformer Core Based on Amorphous Steel
by Jolanta Nieroda, Grzegorz Kmita, Michal Kozupa, Szymon Piela and Andrzej Rybak
Polymers 2024, 16(13), 1840; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym16131840 - 28 Jun 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1331
Abstract
The constantly evolving electrification also entails an increase in requirements for the effective and efficient distribution of electricity with the lowest possible power losses. Such needs can be met by highly effective electrical devices, and one of them is a transformer whose main [...] Read more.
The constantly evolving electrification also entails an increase in requirements for the effective and efficient distribution of electricity with the lowest possible power losses. Such needs can be met by highly effective electrical devices, and one of them is a transformer whose main component is a magnetic core. Currently, one of the soft magnetic materials used alternatively for the production of transformer cores are amorphous metal strips with competitive losses. However, to successfully use these materials, a key problem must be solved: limited mechanical stability. The presented article describes the development and application of a polyimide-based binder for efficient bonding of an amorphous metal ribbon. The layered binder was characterized using confocal microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy, and its anticorrosion and mechanical properties were examined. As a final step, a prototype of a toroidal magnetic core bonded with the binder was manufactured and subjected to the evaluation of no-load loss and the analysis of the emitted noise. It was confirmed that the proposed polyimide binder tremendously improved the mechanical stability while reducing core losses and audible noise. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Functional Polymer Materials for Advanced Technologies)
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16 pages, 1134 KiB  
Article
Developing Problematic Performance Value Scores: Binding Routine Activity Performance, Environmental Barriers, and Health Conditions
by Jimin Choi and JiYoung Park
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21(6), 764; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21060764 - 13 Jun 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1181
Abstract
Background: Community design features, such as sidewalks and street crossings, present significant challenges for individuals with disabilities, hindering their physical performance and social integration. However, limited research has been conducted on the application of Universal Design (UD) to address these challenges, particularly concerning [...] Read more.
Background: Community design features, such as sidewalks and street crossings, present significant challenges for individuals with disabilities, hindering their physical performance and social integration. However, limited research has been conducted on the application of Universal Design (UD) to address these challenges, particularly concerning specific demographic groups and population cohorts. Understanding the influence of environmental features on physical performance is crucial for developing inclusive solutions like UD, which can enhance usability and social integration across diverse populations. Objective: This study aims to bridge this gap by investigating the complex relationships between environmental barriers, health conditions, and routine activity performance. An index was developed to evaluate users’ UD performance based on functional capacity, providing scientifically rigorous and objectively measured evidence of UD effectiveness in creating inclusive built environments. Method: Using data from the Problematic Activities Survey (PAS) conducted in the U.S., Canada, and Australia and targeting individuals with and without functional limitations, multinomial logit models were employed to estimate the probabilities of encountering performance problems. This analysis led to the development of the Problematic Performance Value (PPV) score. Results: The results demonstrated significant disparities in PPVs across various health conditions, particularly concerning curb ramps. Individuals facing mobility issues in their legs/feet, arms/hands, or back/neck encounter more pronounced challenges, especially when curb ramps lack proper design elements. Similarly, individuals with vision impairments face heightened difficulties with traffic signals, particularly due to issues with audible signal systems. These findings underscore the importance of addressing micro-level environmental challenges to accommodate individuals with varying functional capacities effectively. Conclusions: By providing insights into the most problematic daily activities encountered by diverse populations, the PPV score serves as a valuable indicator for guiding environmental design improvements and promoting equitable space usage. This can be used to guide improved UD solutions and decide areas of concentration by providing generalized information on specific environmental features that contribute to user performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Big Data Analysis to Health Risk Assessment)
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15 pages, 5547 KiB  
Technical Note
Pragmatic De-Noising of Electroglottographic Signals
by Sten Ternström
Bioengineering 2024, 11(5), 479; https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11050479 - 11 May 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1680
Abstract
In voice analysis, the electroglottographic (EGG) signal has long been recognized as a useful complement to the acoustic signal, but only when the vocal folds are actually contacting, such that this signal has an appreciable amplitude. However, phonation can also occur without the [...] Read more.
In voice analysis, the electroglottographic (EGG) signal has long been recognized as a useful complement to the acoustic signal, but only when the vocal folds are actually contacting, such that this signal has an appreciable amplitude. However, phonation can also occur without the vocal folds contacting, as in breathy voice, in which case the EGG amplitude is low, but not zero. It is of great interest to identify the transition from non-contacting to contacting, because this will substantially change the nature of the vocal fold oscillations; however, that transition is not in itself audible. The magnitude of the cycle-normalized peak derivative of the EGG signal is a convenient indicator of vocal fold contacting, but no current EGG hardware has a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio of the derivative. We show how the textbook techniques of spectral thresholding and static notch filtering are straightforward to implement, can run in real time, and can mitigate several noise problems in EGG hardware. This can be useful to researchers in vocology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Models and Analysis of Vocal Emissions for Biomedical Applications)
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29 pages, 7345 KiB  
Article
Practical Steps towards Establishing an Underwater Acoustic Network in the Context of the Marine Internet of Things
by Konstantin Kebkal, Aleksey Kabanov, Oleg Kramar, Maksim Dimin, Timur Abkerimov, Vadim Kramar and Veronika Kebkal-Akbari
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(8), 3527; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14083527 - 22 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1262
Abstract
When several hydroacoustic modems operate simultaneously in an area of mutual coverage, collisions of data packets received from several sources may occur, which lead to information loss. With an increase in the number of simultaneously operating hydroacoustic modems, physical layer algorithms do not [...] Read more.
When several hydroacoustic modems operate simultaneously in an area of mutual coverage, collisions of data packets received from several sources may occur, which lead to information loss. With an increase in the number of simultaneously operating hydroacoustic modems, physical layer algorithms do not provide stable data transmission and the likelihood of collisions increases, which makes the operation of modems ineffective. To ensure effective operation in a hydroacoustic signal propagation environment and to reduce collisions when exchanging data between two modems that do not have the ability to operate synchronously and to reduce the access time to the signal propagation environment, methods of the medium access control layer using link layer protocols are required. Typically, this problem is solved using code separation of hydroacoustic channels. If you need to transfer over a network, this option will not work, since network transfer involves working on the basis of “broadcast” messages, particularly between data source and data sink that remain too far from each other, outside of their mutual audibility. In practical use, it is convenient to place these protocols into a software environment for developing specific user applications for solving network communication problems. This software framework allows for custom modification of existing network algorithms, as well as the inclusion of new network hydroacoustic communication algorithms. To build a predictive model, the DACAP, T-Lohi, Flooding, and ICRP protocols were used in this work. The implementation is performed in Erlang. The paper presents algorithms for implementing these protocols. A comparative analysis of network operation with and without protocols is provided. Efficiency of operation, i.e., data rates and probabilities of data delivery, was assessed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs): Applications and Technologies)
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23 pages, 9705 KiB  
Article
A Study of Sliding Friction Using an Acoustic Emission and Wavelet-Based Energy Approach
by Sergey Sychev and Andre D. L. Batako
Machines 2024, 12(4), 265; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines12040265 - 16 Apr 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1493
Abstract
The purpose of this work is to study the mechanism of running-in during friction and to determine the informative parameters characterizing the degree of its completion. During friction, contact interaction of rough surfaces causes various wave phenomena covering a wide range of frequencies, [...] Read more.
The purpose of this work is to study the mechanism of running-in during friction and to determine the informative parameters characterizing the degree of its completion. During friction, contact interaction of rough surfaces causes various wave phenomena covering a wide range of frequencies, the subsequent frequency analysis can provide information about the sizes of wave sources and thereby clarify the mechanism of interaction between surface roughness. The using of the wavelet transform for processing the signals of audible acoustic emission made it possible to determine the beginning and the end of the change in the frequency ranges of the interaction of roughness. The code developed by the authors was used to analyze the acoustic emission signals by using wavelet energy and entropy criteria. The mother wavelet was chosen by carefully evaluating the effectiveness of 54 preliminary candidates for the mother wavelet from 7 wavelet families, according to three criteria: (1) maximum wavelet energy; (2) Shannon entropy minimum; and (3) maximum energy-to-Shannon entropy ratio. Full article
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21 pages, 4923 KiB  
Review
Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems Microphones: A Brief Review Emphasizing Recent Advances in Audible Spectrum Applications
by Zhuoyue Zheng, Chen Wang, Linlin Wang, Zeyu Ji, Xiaoxiao Song, Pui-In Mak, Huafeng Liu and Yuan Wang
Micromachines 2024, 15(3), 352; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15030352 - 29 Feb 2024
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 5555
Abstract
The MEMS microphone is a representative device among the MEMS family, which has attracted substantial research interest, and those tailored for human voice have earned distinct success in commercialization. Although sustained development persists, challenges such as residual stress, environmental noise, and structural innovation [...] Read more.
The MEMS microphone is a representative device among the MEMS family, which has attracted substantial research interest, and those tailored for human voice have earned distinct success in commercialization. Although sustained development persists, challenges such as residual stress, environmental noise, and structural innovation are posed. To collect and summarize the recent advances in this subject, this paper presents a concise review concerning the transduction mechanism, diverse mechanical structure topologies, and effective methods of noise reduction for high-performance MEMS microphones with a dynamic range akin to the audible spectrum, aiming to provide a comprehensive and adequate analysis of this scope. Full article
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31 pages, 1052 KiB  
Article
Is It Better for a Publisher to Release an Audiobook after Its E-Book Version?
by Linlan Zhang
Systems 2024, 12(1), 33; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems12010033 - 18 Jan 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2394
Abstract
The e-books industry is mature, and audiobooks are becoming increasingly popular. More and more publishers are coming to realize that audiobooks could be a potential revenue driver and intend to release audiobooks. Considering that there is a certain substitutability between e-books and audiobooks, [...] Read more.
The e-books industry is mature, and audiobooks are becoming increasingly popular. More and more publishers are coming to realize that audiobooks could be a potential revenue driver and intend to release audiobooks. Considering that there is a certain substitutability between e-books and audiobooks, publishers need to decide how to release a book in its audible version and its e-book version into the market. In this paper, we incorporate the discount factor and the consumers’ acceptance level for audiobooks into the consumer utility by dividing consumers into two types, high-value type and low-value type, and construct two different release models: releasing the audiobook and the e-book simultaneously and releasing the audiobook after the e-book. Using an optimization tool, we investigate pricing strategies of a monopolistic publisher under two different release models. By comparing the theoretical results of the two models, we find that when the consumers’ patience exceeds a certain threshold, releasing a book in its audible version after its e-book version is better for the publisher, and the publisher should adopt a skimming (refers to decreasing markups over time) pricing strategy for the e-book in this case. Further, the publisher should set a higher price for the audiobook than the e-book, whether or not they release the audiobook after the e-book. In addition, we conduct a numerical analysis to investigate how the discount factor, the percentage of high-value consumers, and the high-value consumers’ acceptance level for audiobooks affect the consumer surplus and the social welfare. This study offers publishers some managerial insights into the complex issues involving pricing and release strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems Practice in Social Science)
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