Inertial audio effects controller

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Motion controlled audio effects controller Xpression fx system.png
Motion controlled audio effects controller

An inertial audio effects controller is an electronic device that senses changes in acceleration, angular velocity and/or a magnetic field, [1] and relays those changes to an effects controller. Transmitting the sensed data can be done via wired or wireless methods. To be of use the effects controller must be connected to an effect unit so that an effect can be modulated, or connected to a MIDI controller or musical keyboard. The Wah-Wah effect is a classic example of effect modulation.

Contents

An inertial audio effects controller can be compared with a traditional expression pedal to explain what it does. An inertial effects controller uses an inertial sensor to detect user directed changes, whereas a traditional expression pedal uses an electrically resistive element to detect changes. There are some advantages and disadvantages between the two. The main advantages of inertial control versus a traditional foot pedal, are an increased range of dynamic motion, remote control, finer modulation precision and software enabled features such as motion triggered ADSR envelopes and bi-directional motion control. The main disadvantages are the requirement for a power source and a more complicated setup. [2]

Due to their functional similarity with traditional expression pedals, they have been given the informal name, 'Expression box'.

Availability

Conceivably any or all of the inertial sensors (accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer), could be used for effect modulation. However, currently the only commercially available products use acceleration sensing only [3] [4] or acceleration combined with angular velocity, [5] as sensed by a gyroscope.

Future

Inertial control of an audio device, wired or wireless, is a relatively recent and growing trend as technology advances have reduced pricing and size as well as improved usability and performance of the core components. [6] [7] Specifically the core components are an inertial device called a Mirco- Electro-Mechanical-System (MEMs), a microcontroller, and for wireless systems, a radio frequency transmitter/receiver.

Related Research Articles

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Electro-Harmonix Guitar pedals company

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Mu-Tron

Musitronics, often shortened to Mu-tron, was a manufacturer of electronic musical effects active in the 1970s. Founded by Mike Beigel and Aaron Newman, the company's products provided filtering and processing effects and were derived from synthesizer components. The company was known for producing high-quality products with many user-adjustable parameters, but high production costs and a failed product line, the Gizmotron, caused its downfall.

A PIGA is a type of accelerometer that can measure acceleration and simultaneously integrates this acceleration against time to produce a speed measure as well. The PIGA's main use is in Inertial Navigation Systems (INS) for guidance of aircraft and most particularly for ballistic missile guidance. It is valued for its extremely high sensitivity and accuracy in conjunction with operation over a wide acceleration range. The PIGA is still considered the premier instrument for strategic grade missile guidance, though systems based on MEMS technology are attractive for lower performance requirements.

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Kionix, Inc. is a manufacturer of MEMS inertial sensors. Headquartered in Ithaca, New York, United States, the company is a wholly owned subsidiary of ROHM Co., Ltd. of Japan. Kionix developed high-aspect-ratio silicon micromachining based on research originally conducted at Cornell University. The company offers inertial sensors, and development tools and application support to enable motion-based gaming; user-interface functionality in mobile handsets, personal navigation and TV remote controllers; and hard-disk-drive drop protection in mobile products. The company's MEMS products are also used in the automotive, industrial and health-care sectors. Kionix is ISO 9001:2008 and TS16949 registered.

Source Audio is a guitar effects pedal company based near Boston, Massachusetts. They produce modular effects pedals for electric guitar and bass, such as the Nemesis Delay, Ventris Dual Reverb, and Collider Delay+Reverb, as well as the C4 Synth, a modular rack synthesizer in pedal format, the Aftershock Bass Distortion, and the EQ2, a 10-band parametric equalizer with a plug-in style desktop interface. They are also the creators of the Hot Hand Wireless Effects Controller, a device worn around the finger that uses an accelerometer to send expression signal to an effect like an envelope filter. Source Audio mainly uses DSP to create their effects, and are known to program their own processor chips.

Inertial measurement unit Electronic device

An inertial measurement unit (IMU) is an electronic device that measures and reports a body's specific force, angular rate, and sometimes the orientation of the body, using a combination of accelerometers, gyroscopes, and sometimes magnetometers. IMUs are typically used to maneuver modern vehicles including motorcycles, missiles, aircraft, including unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), among many others, and spacecraft, including satellites and landers. Recent developments allow for the production of IMU-enabled GPS devices. An IMU allows a GPS receiver to work when GPS-signals are unavailable, such as in tunnels, inside buildings, or when electronic interference is present.

Pressure reference system

Pressure reference system (PRS) is an enhancement of the inertial reference system and attitude and heading reference system designed to provide position angles measurements which are stable in time and do not suffer from long term drift caused by the sensor imperfections. The measurement system uses behavior of the International Standard Atmosphere where atmospheric pressure descends with increasing altitude and two pairs of measurement units. Each pair measures pressure at two different positions that are mechanically connected with known distance between units, e.g. the units are mounted at the tips of the wing. In horizontal flight, there is no pressure difference measured by the measurement system which means the position angle is zero. In case the airplane banks, the tips of the wings mutually change their positions, one is going up and the second one is going down, and the pressure sensors in every unit measure different values which are translated into a position angle.

InvenSense American microelectronics company

InvenSense Inc. is the provider of the MotionTracking sensor system on chip (SoC) which functions as a gyroscope for consumer electronic devices such as smartphones, tablets, wearables, gaming devices, optical image stabilization, and remote controls for Smart TVs. InvenSense provides the motion controller in the Nintendo Wii game controller and the Oculus Rift DK1. Its motion controllers are found in the Samsung Galaxy smartphones and most recently in the Apple iPhone 6. Founded in 2003, InvenSense is headquartered in San Jose, California with offices in Wilmington, Massachusetts, China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, France, Canada, Slovakia and Italy.

References

  1. "MEMS Accelerometer Gyroscope Magnetometer & Arduino". HowToMechatronics. 2015-11-19. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  2. "Inertial expression". www.expressionpedals.com. Archived from the original on 2018-01-28.
  3. "EHX.com | Expression Pedal - Real-Time Variable Control | Electro-Harmonix". Electro-Harmonix. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  4. "Hot Hand® 3". www.sourceaudio.net. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  5. "Home". ozinventions.com.
  6. "Thinking outside the chip for MEMS design success - Electronic Products". www.electronicproducts.com. 16 February 2010. Retrieved 2017-11-16.
  7. "allaboutmems.com - What is MEMS > MEMS Applications > MEMS in Wireless". www.allaboutmems.com. Retrieved 2017-11-16.