Adobe AUDITION 3 User Manual page 118

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Causes the waveform's sample values to be faded in an even, linear fashion, producing a
Linear Fades (Fade tab)
smooth slope from beginning to end.
Logarithmic Fades (Fade tab)
the amplitude of a signal fades at a constant rate, producing a steeper slope at one end of the fade (depending on
whether you fade in or out).
Ensures that new recordings are perfectly centered. Some recording hardware may introduce a DC
DC Bias Adjust
bias, causing the recorded waveform to appear to be above or below the normal center line in the wave display. Many
waveform transformations require that the signal be centered.
• Select Absolute and then specify the final DC percentage in the L and R boxes. This option lets you cancel out DC
that's not constant throughout a waveform. An extreme low-cut filter achieves this result. Keep in mind that the
actual amount adjusted varies with each sample. For example, if you have a significant DC change in one area of
the wave, at that boundary where the DC changes, the Absolute option makes all parts the same. (However, there
will be a dip or peak right at the boundary point.) To introduce a DC bias by skewing the entire selected waveform
above or below the center line, enter a positive or negative percentage. For example, a setting of 50% moves the
entire waveform up halfway, and one of -50% moves it down halfway.
• Select Differential and click Find Zero Now to analyze the entire selected area to get the DC offset, and adjust every
sample by the inverse of that exact amount. The correct L and R percentages are entered automatically.
Sets the peak level used for normalizing audio.
Peak Level
Scans the selection and adjusts the amplification sliders to normalize the selection according to the
Calculate Now
peak level
Lets you adjust channels together or separately. Select this option to adjust the channels together,
Lock Left/Right
maintaining the same settings for each. Leave this option unselected to adjust each channel separately. Separate
adjustments let you tweak the stereo balance or create cool panning effects.
Causes amplification values to appear in decibels; otherwise, they appear as a percentage of
View All Settings In dB
the original waveform.
Dynamics Processing effect
The Amplitude And Compression > Dynamics Processing effect can be used as a compressor, limiter, or expander.
As a compressor and limiter, this effect reduces dynamic range, producing consistent volume levels. As an expander,
it increases dynamic range by reducing the level of low-level signals. (With extreme expander settings, you can totally
eliminate noise that falls below a specific amplitude threshold.)
The Dynamics Processing effect can produce subtle changes that you notice only after repeated listening. When
applying this effect in Edit View, use a copy of the original file so you can return to the original audio if necessary.
Use the Broadcast Limiter preset to simulate the processed sound of a contemporary FM radio station.
Applies a logarithmic-style fade (also known as a power fade). If you select this option,
ADOBE AUDITION 3.0
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