4

Can anyone tell me why the volume becomes lower when I make the pitch higher in openal? The higher the pitch, the lower the volume.....

alSourcef(source, AL_PITCH, 1.2f); alSourcef(source, AL_GAIN, 1.0f);

with this setting, the volume is still very very low. is there a way to cheat it to make the gain above 1? Maybe this has something to do with distance??

FYI, the source is a voice recorded from AVrecorder, so I cant set the source volume any higher.

4
  • I assume you're talking about perceived loudness vs. some sort of observed change in amplitude...? What sort of sample are you playing? You may be dropping frequencies or exceeding the capabilities of your hardware to render them (or your ears to perceive them...)
    – Shog9
    Oct 11, 2010 at 18:40
  • alSourcef(source, AL_PITCH, 1.2f); alSourcef(source, AL_GAIN, 1.0f);
    – Xiu
    Oct 11, 2010 at 18:45
  • just a tiny bit change in the pitch....
    – Xiu
    Oct 11, 2010 at 20:07
  • 1
    Higher frequency sustained sounds will be perceived by the human ear to be "quieter" than a lower frequency sound of identical amplitude. Higher frequency short sounds (less than a quarter second) will be perceived by the human ear to be "louder" than a lower frequency sound of identical amplitude.
    – Karl
    Mar 31, 2011 at 16:27

1 Answer 1

3

Afaik it is not normal that the amplitude would change in function of pitch change. When pitch is set higher than original, openal speeds up the sample by the multiplier (afaik) using some sort of interpolation when the multiplier is not whole.

There might be some rare cases where the amplitude changes, but probably not for longer samples with lots of frequency content (as most natural sounds tend to be)

How loud we perceive that amplitude depends on the pitch, see equal loudness contour
Maybe that effect explains your question?

As workaround you could lower the gain for normal pitched sounds and use higher gain for higher pitched sounds.
Or multiply the source data by a multiplier before attaching/passing to a buffer.

2
  • ah, I like the multiplier idea for the source data. I will look into that. Thanks Emile :)
    – Xiu
    Oct 13, 2010 at 17:57
  • Thank you everybody for the help, I found setting the gain way higher than 1, such as 5, or 100 solved the low volume problem. :)
    – Xiu
    Oct 17, 2010 at 1:39

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.