I would guess that as long as the phases of the remaining components in the encoded signals are not significantly affected, there should be no spatial artifacts introduced (only the spectral artifacts should be present). Not sure however how much phases are affected by denoisers.
Cheers, Andrés On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 12:23 PM, Paul Hodges <pwh-surro...@cassland.org> wrote: > --On 04 January 2016 21:17 +0100 Trond Lossius <trond.loss...@bek.no> > wrote: > > > 1) I treat the original A-format recordings, and afterwards I convert > > the processed files to B-format > > I have done this - when I had a situation that one channel only of the > A-format contained the noise. I was not aware of any anomalies arising > from this (and I did go looking), but I guess my typical recordings > with a lot of ambience might not show any problems clearly. > > Alternatively, both Adobe Audition and Sony Sound Forge and > SpectraLayers can handle multi-channel files, and have useful noise > reduction facilities. I have used each, and again have heard no > decoding problems arising from their use. > > Paul > > -- > Paul Hodges > > _______________________________________________ > Sursound mailing list > Sursound@music.vt.edu > https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound - unsubscribe here, > edit account or options, view archives and so on. > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20160104/318047d6/attachment.html> _______________________________________________ Sursound mailing list Sursound@music.vt.edu https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound - unsubscribe here, edit account or options, view archives and so on.