AMR-NB: Difference between revisions

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* Frame quality indicator (1 bit) - flag that shows if frame is good
* Frame quality indicator bit: 0 bad/corrupted (can use error concealment), 1 good
* CRC (8 bits) - CRC with polynomial x^8+x^6+x^5+x^4+1 computed over Class A bits
* CRC (8 bits) - CRC with polynomial x^8+x^6+x^5+x^4+1 computed over Class A bits
* Class A bits - the most important data
* Class A bits - the most important data

Revision as of 21:06, 22 June 2007

AMR-NB (Adaptive Multi-Rate Narrowband) is a vocoder employed in low-bitrate applications like mobile phones.

Frame format

Specification (26.101) describes two possible frame types - interface formats 1 and 2 (often abbreviated IF1 and IF2). IF2 is byte-aligned.

IF1 format

 Frame type (4 bits)
 Frame quality indicator (1 bit)
 Mode indication (3 bits)
 Mode request (3 bits)
 CRC (8 bits)
 Class A bits
 Class B bits
 Class C bits
 

IF2 format

 Frame type (4 bits)
 Class A bits
 Class B bits
 Class C bits
 Padding (called "Bit Stuffing" in spec)

Field meaning

Frame type Frame content
0 AMR 4.75kbps
1 AMR 5.15kbps
2 AMR 5.90kbps
3 AMR 6.70kbps (PDC-EFR)
4 AMR 7.40kbps (TDMA-EFR)
5 AMR 7.95kbps
6 AMR 10.2kbps
7 AMR 12.2kbps (GSM-EFR)
8 AMR SID
9 GSM-EFR SID
10 TDMA-EFR SID
11 PDC-EFR SID
12-14 Reserved for future use
15 No data (no transmission/no reception)
  • Frame quality indicator bit: 0 bad/corrupted (can use error concealment), 1 good
  • CRC (8 bits) - CRC with polynomial x^8+x^6+x^5+x^4+1 computed over Class A bits
  • Class A bits - the most important data
  • Class B bits - less important data
  • Class C bits - additional not very important data that may be present only on higher bitrates (frame types 6 and 7)

How to smear bits between all these classes is defined by so-called 'importance function'