Adaptive cancellation of adjacent channel interference

A new method to combat the adjacent channel interference (ACI) encountered with multichannel receivers is presented. In the case of a two-channel receiver, components of the desired signal may become present in the reference to the interference rendering traditional adaptive noise cancellation ineffective. This situation is similar to two-microphone systems used for speech enhancement. The crosstalk resistant adaptive noise canceller (CTRANC), designed to work in the two-microphone case, is unable to provide any signal improvement for the ACI model. A new system is proposed which uses a priori knowledge of the crosstalk gained by the injection of a known signal into either the input of the receiver or into the output of a transmitter, whichever is appropriate. This injection system is then compared with the CTRANC and other methods by means of extensive computer simulation.<<ETX>>

[1]  Joseph B. Evans,et al.  Some experimental and theoretical results using a new adaptive filter structure for noise cancellation in the presence of crosstalk , 1985, ICASSP '85. IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing.

[2]  Ehud Weinstein,et al.  Maximum likelihood noise cancellation using the EM algorithm , 1989, IEEE Trans. Acoust. Speech Signal Process..

[3]  B. Widrow,et al.  Adaptive noise cancelling: Principles and applications , 1975 .