Conferencing Features

Overview

The robust suite of Conferencing Features includes:

Automatic Gain Control

Output Gain Control

Noise Gating

Echo Suppression

Conference Tracking

Conference Failure Handling

You can configure these features to handle such things as network and signal problems (background noise, echo, and speakers who are too loud or too quiet), conference failure, and conference tracking.

These parameters are especially important for large conferences because as conferences grow, so does the likelihood of impaired signals and networks, and so does the number of users affected. These settings apply to up to two streams of 128 participants.

There are default settings for these features at the card level, and these should work well in most environments. However, you can change the defaults for an entire card, for an entire conference when the conference is created, and for individual conferees (conference legs).

Automatic Gain Control

Automatic Gain Control (AGC) automatically detects variations in volume input and adjusts the input level to be within a decibel range that you can specify, in 1 dB increments. So if a conferee’s voice input (one conference leg) is either too quiet or too loud, AGC adjusts the input so that it falls within your specified acceptable range. You can specify the duration (time constant) of the sample used to determine the volume of the conferee’s voice, in increments of 5 ms.

Output Gain Control

When output gain (volume) is too low or too high, you can control it using the Output Gain Control feature. You can adjust gain from –40dB to +10dB, in increments of 1dB. The Excel platform acts upon the most recent command. For example, if a change is made at the conference leg level and then at the conference level, the conference level setting overrides the leg level setting because that was the last change made.

Noise Gating

During natural breaks in conversation (when the speaker on a channel is not speaking) if significant ambient noise is coming into a conference from the speaker’s line, that noise can be gated using the Noise Gating feature. As a conference grows in size, ambient noise is more likely to become a problem.

You can customize the time span (time constant) over which noise is measured, in increments of 5 ms. You can also specify a maximum allowable estimated noise level in 1 dBm increments, from
–54 dBm to –10 dBm.

Echo Suppression

If a conference leg is generating echoed signal, you can mute that echoed signal using the Echo Suppression feature. Note how this differs from echo cancellation. Echo Suppression adaptively measures the reflected signal input, and adapts its echo estimate up to a maximum noise value, which you can select in 1 dBm increments, from
–54 dBm to –10 dBm.

Conference Tracking

You can query the channel IDs of the three active (loudest) parties that are being summed together and the time they have been active. The report is returned in the Generic Report message (0x0046).

Conference Failure Handling

If a DSP card, module, or chip that is hosting a conference fails, all the channels in the failed conferences can now be parked instead of purged, although the default is still to purge. You can override this default for all conferences created, individual conferences, or individual conference legs. The application is responsible for rebuilding the conference on another DSP resource or for releasing the conference legs.

Configuration

See Configuring Conferencing Features.