FS-1016
FS-1016 is a deprecated secure telephony speech encoding standard developed by the United States Department of Defense. The standard was finished in 1991.
Unlike the vocoder used in FS-1015, CELP provides more natural speech. However, due to quite low bit rate and early development (1991), the speech quality is very noisy and below that of commercial cellular speech codec such as AMR. FS-1016 is no longer used since its follower MELP provides better performance in all applications.
Technical details
The bit rate of the codec is 4.8 kbit/s. The complexity of the codec is 19 MIPS. The RAM requirement is 1.5 kilobytes. Frame size of the codec is 30 ms. Look-ahead of 7.5 ms is also required.
The variation of CELP used in the FS-1016 is so-called ternary codebook, meaning that all excitation amplitudes are either +1, −1 or 0. The sub frame gain is calculated and sent to the receiver.
References
- "CELP-3.2a and LPC-10" Speech at Carnegie Mellon University