From Hydrogenaudio Knowledgebase
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| Intensity stereo coding is a method that achieves a saving in [[bitrate]] by replacing the left and the right signal by a single representing signal plus directional information. This replacement is psychoacoustically justified in the higher [[frequency]] range since the human auditory system is insensitive to the signal phase at frequencies above approximately 20kHz.
| | #REDIRECT [[Joint stereo]] |
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| Intensity stereo is by definition a lossy coding method thus it is primarily useful at low [[bitrate|bit rates]]. It does not keep the phase information of the signal. for coding at higher [[bitrate|bit rates]] m/s-stereo or stereo -coding should be used.
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Latest revision as of 16:51, 1 December 2006