# How Digital Audio Compression Saves Space by Copying Frequencies

> A method for shrinking audio files by only saving the lower-pitched sounds and using clever math to reconstruct the higher-pitched sounds from them.

- **Patent:** US RE47935
- **Original title:** USRE47935E1 - Encoding device and decoding device
- **Owner:** Dolby International AB
- **Granted:** 2020
- **Status:** Active
- **Times cited:** 0
- **Field:** telecommunications, consumer_electronics, software

## What it does

This patent describes a way to compress digital audio by splitting a sound signal into two parts: a lower frequency range that is saved in full, and a higher frequency range that is reconstructed. Instead of saving all the high-frequency data, the encoder identifies a specific 'partial spectrum' from the lower range and copies it to represent the higher range. It then sends a few parameters—like a gain factor to adjust volume and a toggle to invert the signal—to tell the decoder exactly how to transform that copied piece to sound like the original high frequencies. This significantly reduces the amount of data needed to transmit or store high-quality audio.

## What it does NOT cover

- Does not cover audio compression that saves the entire high-frequency spectrum without using frequency copying or band extension.
- Does not cover methods that do not use the specific third parameter for frequency domain inversion of the copied spectrum.
- Does not cover the physical hardware of microphones or speakers used to capture or play back the audio.

## The clever bit

The innovation lies in the third parameter that dictates whether the copied lower-frequency spectrum should be inverted in the frequency domain, allowing the decoder to better match the harmonic characteristics of the original high-frequency signal.

## Real-world examples

1. High-efficiency audio codecs used in mobile voice calling (VoLTE)
2. Streaming audio services that adapt quality based on network speed
3. Digital radio broadcasting systems

## Why it matters

Efficient audio compression is the backbone of modern streaming services and telecommunications. By allowing high-fidelity sound to be transmitted using less bandwidth, this technology enables clear voice calls over mobile networks and high-quality music streaming on limited data plans. Dolby International maintains this as part of a broader portfolio that defines how audio is handled in digital broadcast and internet standards.

## Frequently asked questions

### What does How Digital Audio Compression Saves Space by Copying Frequencies cover?

A method for shrinking audio files by only saving the lower-pitched sounds and using clever math to reconstruct the higher-pitched sounds from them.

### Who owns patent US RE47935?

Dolby International AB owns this patent, granted in 2020.

### When does this patent expire?

This patent is expected to expire on April 7, 2040, when the invention enters the public domain.

### What problem does this patent solve?

Efficient audio compression is the backbone of modern streaming services and telecommunications. By allowing high-fidelity sound to be transmitted using less bandwidth, this technology enables clear voice calls over mobile networks and high-quality music streaming on limited data plans. Dolby International maintains this as part of a broader portfolio that defines how audio is handled in digital broadcast and internet standards.

### What does this patent NOT cover?

Does not cover audio compression that saves the entire high-frequency spectrum without using frequency copying or band extension.

**Full plain-English explainer:** https://patentbrief.org/patent/us/RE47935/google-chrome-browser

**Original patent:** https://patents.google.com/patent/USRE47935

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_Source: PatentBrief — https://patentbrief.org. Patent facts are from public records; the plain-English explanation is PatentBrief's._
