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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Comparison to μ-law  





2 See also  





3 External links  














A-law algorithm






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from A-law)

This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (February 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Comparison of A-law (blue) and μ-law (red) compression on an input signal (green). Both axis use logarithmic scaleindecibels.
Plot of F(x) for A-Law for A = 87.6


AnA-law algorithm is a standard companding algorithm, used in European 8-bit PCM digital communications systems to optimize, i.e. modify, the dynamic range of an analog signal for digitizing. It is one of the two companding algorithms in the G.711 standard from ITU-T, the other being the similar μ-law, used in North America and Japan.

For a given input , the equation for A-law encoding is as follows:

where is the compression parameter. In Europe, .

A-law expansion is given by the inverse function:

The reason for this encoding is that the wide dynamic rangeofspeech does not lend itself well to efficient linear digital encoding. A-law encoding effectively reduces the dynamic range of the signal, thereby increasing the coding efficiency and resulting in a signal-to-distortion ratio that is superior to that obtained by linear encoding for a given number of bits.

Comparison to μ-law[edit]

The μ-law algorithm provides a slightly larger dynamic range than the A-law at the cost of worse proportional distortion for small signals. By convention, A-law is used for an international connection if at least one country uses it.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]

Lossless

Entropy type

  • Arithmetic
  • Asymmetric numeral systems
  • Golomb
  • Huffman
  • Range
  • Shannon
  • Shannon–Fano
  • Shannon–Fano–Elias
  • Tunstall
  • Unary
  • Universal
  • Dictionary type

  • Lempel–Ziv
  • Other types

  • CTW
  • CM
  • Delta
  • DMC
  • DPCM
  • Grammar
  • LDCT
  • MTF
  • PAQ
  • PPM
  • RLE
  • Hybrid

  • LZX
  • LZS
  • LZ77 + ANS
  • LZ77 + Huffman + ANS
  • LZ77 + Huffman + context
  • LZSS + Huffman
  • LZ77 + Range
  • RLE + BWT + MTF + Huffman
  • Lossy

    Transform type

  • MDCT
  • DST
  • FFT
  • Wavelet
  • Predictive type

  • LPC
  • Motion
  • Psychoacoustic
  • Audio

    Concepts

  • CBR
  • VBR
  • Companding
  • Convolution
  • Dynamic range
  • Latency
  • Nyquist–Shannon theorem
  • Sampling
  • Silence compression
  • Sound quality
  • Speech coding
  • Sub-band coding
  • Codec parts

  • μ-law
  • DPCM
  • FT
  • LPC
  • MDCT
  • Psychoacoustic model
  • Image

    Concepts

  • Coding tree unit
  • Color space
  • Compression artifact
  • Image resolution
  • Macroblock
  • Pixel
  • PSNR
  • Quantization
  • Standard test image
  • Texture compression
  • Methods

  • DCT
  • Deflate
  • Fractal
  • KLT
  • LP
  • RLE
  • Wavelet
  • Video

    Concepts

  • CBR
  • VBR
  • Display resolution
  • Frame
  • Frame rate
  • Frame types
  • Interlace
  • Video characteristics
  • Video quality
  • Codec parts

  • DPCM
  • Deblocking filter
  • Lapped transform
  • Motion
  • Wavelet
  • Theory

  • FM-index
  • Entropy
  • Information theory
  • Kolmogorov complexity
  • Prefix code
  • Quantization
  • Rate–distortion
  • Redundancy
  • Symmetry
  • Smallest grammar problem
  • Community

    People

  • Compression software (codecs)

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=A-law_algorithm&oldid=1221668182"

    Categories: 
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