Peter Scheiber | |
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Born | April 30, 1935 |
Died | January 18, 2023 Bloomington, Indiana, U.S. |
Alma mater | Oberlin Conservatory of Music |
Occupation | Founder of Scheiber quadraphonic system |
Peter Scheiber was a classically trained musician and audio engineer. He was considered to be the originator of multichannel matrix audio formats, a mathematical formula used to convert four audio channels into two and back again.
Scheiber was also the inventor of the 360-degree spatial decoder.[1] Like Lou Dorren, Scheiber was an early pioneer of multi-channel sound.[2] It has been written that Scheiber pioneered the surround sound technology that is used in theaters today and referred to as Dolby Surround.[3][4][5]
In matrix quadraphonic systems four channels are converted (encoded) down to two channels. These two matrixed channels are recorded onto tape or vinyl record. Reproduction occurs via a two-channel stereo transmission medium - in most cases a vinyl record - these are decoded back to four channels and reproduced via four loudspeakers.[6][7]