Imagine you are at a loud birthday party. You want to talk to your best friend, but everyone else is shouting and music is blasting. Your ears somehow focus on the voice that matters. Noise-cancelling headphones do something similar for your microphone.
The Two Steps
First, the headphones use anti-noise waves to knock out constant rumbles like airplane engines. This is basic noise cancellation. But distinguishing a human voice from other people talking or sudden bangs takes more work.
The microphone listens to sound in different frequencies (pitch levels). Human voices usually live in a specific middle range, while background noises are often much lower or higher. The headphones use filters like sieves to let the voice frequencies pass through and block the others. They also look for patterns. A human voice changes pitch quickly and has rhythm. Background noise is often steady or chaotic. By watching these patterns, the device knows which sound waves belong to your speech and which ones are just background chatter.
Examples
- A child hums while a blender runs nearby; the headphones keep the humming but cut the whirring.
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