Selectable Mode Vocoder
- For other meanings, see SMV (disambiguation).
SMV (Selectable Mode Vocoder) is speech coding standard used in CDMA-2000 networks. SMV provides multiple modes of operation that are selected based on input speech characteristics.
The Selectable Mode Vocoder (SMV) for Wideband CDMA is based on 4 codecs: full rate at 8.5 kbit/s, half rate at 4 kbit/s, quarter rate at 2 kbit/s, and eighth rate at 800 bit/s. The full rate and half rate are based on the eXtended CELP (eX-CELP) algorithm that is based on a combined closed-loop-open-loop-analysis (COLA). In eX-CELP the signal frames are first classified as:
- Silence/Background noise
- Non-stationary unvoiced
- Stationary unvoiced
- Onset
- Non-stationary voiced
- Stationary voiced
The algorithm includes voice activity detection (VAD) followed by an elaborate frame classification scheme. Silence/background noise and stationary unvoiced frames are represented by spectrum-modulated noise and coded at 1/4 or 1/8 rate. The SMV uses 4 subframes for full rate and three subframes for half rate. The stochastic (fixed) codebook structure is also elaborate and uses sub-codebooks each tuned for a particular type of speech. The sub-codebooks have different degrees of pulse sparseness (more sparse for noise like excitation). SMV scores a high of 4.1 MOS at full rate with clean speech.
The coder works on a frame of 160 speech samples (20 ms) and requires a look ahead of 80 samples (10 ms) if noise-suppression option B is used. An additional 24 samples of look ahead is required if noise-suppression option A is used. So the algorithmic delay for the coder is 30 ms with noise-suppression option B and 33 ms with noise-suppression option A.
The next evolution of CMDA speech codecs is VMR-WB which provides much higher speech quality with wideband while fitting to the same networks.