Score: 2

Aliasing Reduction in Neural Amp Modeling by Smoothing Activations

Published: May 7, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2505.04082v2

By: Ryota Sato, Julius O. Smith III

BigTech Affiliations: Stanford University

Potential Business Impact:

Makes digital music sound like real old amps.

Business Areas:
Semantic Search Internet Services

The increasing demand for high-quality digital emulations of analog audio hardware, such as vintage tube guitar amplifiers, led to numerous works on neural network-based black-box modeling, with deep learning architectures like WaveNet showing promising results. However, a key limitation in all of these models was the aliasing artifacts stemming from nonlinear activation functions in neural networks. In this paper, we investigated novel and modified activation functions aimed at mitigating aliasing within neural amplifier models. Supporting this, we introduced a novel metric, the Aliasing-to-Signal Ratio (ASR), which quantitatively assesses the level of aliasing with high accuracy. Measuring also the conventional Error-to-Signal Ratio (ESR), we conducted studies on a range of preexisting and modern activation functions with varying stretch factors. Our findings confirmed that activation functions with smoother curves tend to achieve lower ASR values, indicating a noticeable reduction in aliasing. Notably, this improvement in aliasing reduction was achievable without a substantial increase in ESR, demonstrating the potential for high modeling accuracy with reduced aliasing in neural amp models.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
8 pages

Category
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science:
Audio and Speech Processing