Skip to content

owen7lloyd/hum

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

53 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

hum

Generate synthetic signals for ML pipelines

To install: pip install hum

functionality

This notebook gathers various examples of the functionality of hum:

  • Synthetic datasets
    • sound-like datasets
    • diagnosis datasets
    • signal generation
  • Plotting and visualization
    • plot
    • display
    • melspectrograms
  • Infinite waveform from spectrums
  • Various sample sounds
  • Voiced time
from hum import (mk_sine_wf, 
                 freq_based_stationary_wf, 
                 BinarySound, 
                 WfGen, 
                 TimeSound, 
                 mk_some_buzz_wf, 
                 wf_with_timed_bleeps,
                 Sound,
                 plot_wf,
                 disp_wf,
                 InfiniteWaveform,
                 Voicer, 
                 tell_time_continuously,
                 random_samples,
                 pure_tone,
                 triangular_tone,
                 square_tone,
                 AnnotatedWaveform,
                 gen_words,
                 categorical_gen,
                 bernoulli_gen,
                 create_session,
                 session_to_df
                )
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from numpy.random import randint
import numpy as np

Synthetic datasets

There are several different forms of synthetic data that hum can produce to be used in machine learning pipelines, with the first being sound-like datasets generally in the form of sine waves

Sound-like datasets

mk_sine_wf provides an easy way to generate a simple waveform for synthetic testing purposes

DFLT_N_SAMPLES = 21 * 2048
DFLT_SR = 44100
wf = mk_sine_wf(freq=5, n_samples=DFLT_N_SAMPLES, sr=DFLT_SR, phase=0, gain=1)
plt.plot(wf);

png

wf = mk_sine_wf(freq=20, n_samples=DFLT_N_SAMPLES, sr=DFLT_SR, phase = 0.25, gain = 3)
plt.plot(wf);

png

freq_based_stationary_wf provides the ability to generate a more complex waveform by mixing sine waves of different frequencies with potentially different weights

wf_mix = freq_based_stationary_wf(freqs=(2, 4, 6, 8), weights=None,
                             n_samples = DFLT_N_SAMPLES, sr = DFLT_SR)
plt.plot(wf_mix);

png

wf_mix = freq_based_stationary_wf(freqs=(2, 4, 6, 8), weights=(3,3,1,1),
                             n_samples = DFLT_N_SAMPLES, sr = DFLT_SR)
plt.plot(wf_mix);

png

WfGen is a class that allows for the generation of sinusoidal waveforms, the generation of lookup tables to be used in generating waveforms, and frequency weighted mixed waveforms

wfgen = WfGen(sr=44100, buf_size_frm=2048, amplitude=0.5)
lookup = np.array(wfgen.mk_lookup_table(freq=880))
wf = wfgen.mk_sine_wf(n_frm=100, freq=880)
np.array(lookup).T
array([ 0.        ,  0.06252526,  0.12406892,  0.1836648 ,  0.24037727,
        0.293316  ,  0.34164989,  0.38462013,  0.42155213,  0.45186607,
        0.47508605,  0.49084754,  0.49890309,  0.49912624,  0.49151348,
        0.47618432,  0.45337943,  0.42345682,  0.38688626,  0.34424188,
        0.29619315,  0.24349441,  0.186973  ,  0.12751624,  0.06605758,
        0.00356187, -0.05898977, -0.12061531, -0.18034728, -0.23724793,
       -0.29042397, -0.33904057, -0.38233448, -0.41962604, -0.45032977,
       -0.47396367, -0.4901567 , -0.49865463, -0.49932406, -0.49215447,
       -0.47725843, -0.45486979, -0.42534003, -0.38913276, -0.34681639,
       -0.29905527, -0.2465992 , -0.19027171, -0.13095709, -0.06958655])
plt.plot(wf);

png

wf_weight = wfgen.mk_wf_from_freq_weight_array(n_frm=10000, freq_weight_array=(10,1,6))
plt.plot(wf_weight);

png

Diagnosis datasets

hum can also produce diagnosis datasets to be applied to machine learning pipelines

BinarySound is a class that generates binary waveforms

bs = BinarySound(nbits=50, redundancy=142, repetition=3, header_size_words=1)
utc = randint(0,2,50)
wf = bs.mk_phrase(utc)
plt.plot(wf[:200]);
all(bs.decode(wf) == utc)
True

png

BinarySound can also be instantiated using audio parameters using the for_audio_params class method

bs = BinarySound.for_audio_params(nbits=50, freq=6000, chk_size_frm=43008, sr=44100, header_size_words=1)
wf = bs.mk_phrase(utc)
plt.plot(wf[:200]);
all(bs.decode(wf) == utc)
True

png

utc phrases can be generated using mk_utc_phrases when BinarySound is instantiated with audio parameters

plt.plot(bs.mk_utc_phrases()[:200]);

png

TimeSound is a class that generates timestamped waveform data

time = TimeSound(sr=44100, buf_size_frm=2048, amplitude=0.5, n_ums_bits=30)
wf = time.timestamped_wf()
plt.plot(wf[2000:2300]);

png

mk_some_buzz_wf and wf_with_timed_bleeps are two more options to generate synthetic data of diagnosis sounds

wf = mk_some_buzz_wf(sr=DFLT_SR)
plt.plot(wf[:500]);

png

wf = wf_with_timed_bleeps(n_samples=DFLT_SR*2, bleep_loc=400, bleep_spec=100, sr=DFLT_SR)
plt.plot(wf[:150]);

png

Signal generation

hum can create signals generated by sequences of symbols, perturbed by outliers injected at given points

symb_res = categorical_gen(gen_words)
out_res = bernoulli_gen(p_out=0.01)
df = session_to_df(create_session(symb_res, out_res, alphabet=list('abcde'), session_length=500))
df.plot(subplots=True, figsize=(20,7));

png

Plotting and visualization

hum also provides several options for plotting and visualization for the synthetic datasets it generates

wfgen = WfGen()
wf = list()
for i in range(1, 1000, 20):
    wf.extend(list(wfgen.mk_sine_wf(n_frm=2048, freq=i)))
wf = np.array(wf)
sr = 44100

Plot waveform

plot_wf(wf[:20000], sr)

png

Display waveform

disp_wf(wf, sr)

png

Melspectrograms with Sound

snd = Sound(wf=wf, sr=sr)
snd.plot_wf(wf=wf[:20000], sr=sr)

png

snd.melspectrogram(plot_it=False)
array([[-63.34856485, -45.14910401, -36.14726097, ..., -80.        ,
        -73.35788085, -60.58728436],
       [-67.99632241, -74.80503122, -80.        , ..., -80.        ,
        -72.1600597 , -60.16803079],
       [-80.        , -80.        , -80.        , ..., -80.        ,
        -72.90050429, -60.90871386],
       ...,
       [-80.        , -80.        , -80.        , ..., -80.        ,
        -80.        , -80.        ],
       [-80.        , -80.        , -80.        , ..., -80.        ,
        -80.        , -80.        ],
       [-80.        , -80.        , -80.        , ..., -80.        ,
        -80.        , -80.        ]])
snd.display()

png

Infinite waveform from spectrum

hum also provides the functionality to create an infinite waveform based on a given spectrum, and a noise amplifier if desired

iwf = InfiniteWaveform(wf)
wf = list(iwf.query(0,500000))
disp_wf(wf)

png

Sound(wf=wf).display()

png

Sample sounds

hum also provides several functions to generate sample sounds shown below

Random sample

wf = random_samples(chk_size_frm=21*2048, max_amplitude=30000)
disp_wf(wf=wf, sr=sr)
Sound(wf=wf).display()

png

png

Pure tone sample

wf = pure_tone(chk_size_frm=21*2048, freq=440, sr=44100, max_amplitude=30000)
disp_wf(wf=wf, sr=sr)
Sound(wf=wf).display()
/Users/owenlloyd/opt/anaconda3/envs/oto3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/matplotlib/axes/_axes.py:7723: RuntimeWarning: divide by zero encountered in log10
  Z = 10. * np.log10(spec)

png

png

Triangular tone sample

wf = triangular_tone(chk_size_frm=21*2048, freq=440, sr=44100, max_amplitude=30000)
disp_wf(wf=wf, sr=sr)
Sound(wf=wf).display()

png

png

Square tone sample

wf = square_tone(chk_size_frm=21*2048, freq=440, sr=44100, max_amplitude=30000)
disp_wf(wf=wf, sr=sr)
Sound(wf=wf).display()

png

png

Annotated Waveform

awf = AnnotatedWaveform(chk_size_frm=21*2048, freq=440, sr=44100, max_amplitude=30000)
gen = awf.chk_and_tag_gen()
list(gen)
[(array([-14025,  11555,  22270, ...,  10243, -18225,   3874], dtype=int16),
  'random'),
 (array([    0,  1902,  3797, ...,  9361, 11149, 12893], dtype=int16),
  'pure_tone'),
 (array([-30000, -29900, -29800, ...,  10500,  10600,  10700], dtype=int16),
  'triangular_tone'),
 (array([30000, 30000, 30000, ..., 30000, 30000, 30000], dtype=int16),
  'square_tone')]
awf.get_wf_and_annots()
(array([  5183,  10421, -21645, ...,  30000,  30000,  30000], dtype=int16),
 {'random': [(0, 43008)],
  'pure_tone': [(43008, 86016)],
  'triangular_tone': [(86016, 129024)],
  'square_tone': [(129024, 172032)]})

Voiced time

Finally hum provides a function that will tell the time continuously with parameters for the frequency, speed, voice, volume, and time format

tell_time_continuously(every_secs=5, verbose=True)
15 45 11
15 45 16
15 45 21
15 45 26
KeyboardInterrupt!!!

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Jupyter Notebook 98.8%
  • Python 1.2%