WO1982003144A1 - Energy band discriminator - Google Patents

Energy band discriminator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1982003144A1
WO1982003144A1 PCT/US1982/000228 US8200228W WO8203144A1 WO 1982003144 A1 WO1982003144 A1 WO 1982003144A1 US 8200228 W US8200228 W US 8200228W WO 8203144 A1 WO8203144 A1 WO 8203144A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
signal
energy
filter
echo
received signal
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1982/000228
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Electric Co Inc Western
Charles William Kevin Gritton
Timothy James Zebo
Original Assignee
Western Electric Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US06/240,979 external-priority patent/US4405840A/en
Priority claimed from US06/240,978 external-priority patent/US4426729A/en
Application filed by Western Electric Co filed Critical Western Electric Co
Priority to DE823235915T priority Critical patent/DE3235915T1/de
Priority to NL8220092A priority patent/NL8220092A/nl
Publication of WO1982003144A1 publication Critical patent/WO1982003144A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B3/00Line transmission systems
    • H04B3/02Details
    • H04B3/20Reducing echo effects or singing; Opening or closing transmitting path; Conditioning for transmission in one direction or the other
    • H04B3/23Reducing echo effects or singing; Opening or closing transmitting path; Conditioning for transmission in one direction or the other using a replica of transmitted signal in the time domain, e.g. echo cancellers

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an energy band discri ⁇ inator useable in an echo canceler which comprises an adjustable signal processing circuit coupled to a first transmission path for generating an echo estimate signal, a combining network coupled to a second transmission path for combining a signal in the second path with the echo estimate signal to generate an error signal, first circuitry responsive to the error signal for adjusting the processing circuit, and second circuitry for supplying the error signal to the adjustable processing circuit.
  • Background of the Invention Echoes commonly occur because of imperfect coupling of incoming signals at 4-to-2 wire junctions in communications systems- The echoes typically result because of imperfect impedance matching to the 2-wire facility in the 4-to-2 wire junction causing the incoming signal to be partially reflected over an outgoing path to the source of incoming signals.
  • Self-adapting echo cancelers have been employed to mitigate the echoes by generating an estimate of the reflected signal or echo and subtracting it from the outgoing signal.
  • the echo estimate is updated in response to the outgoing signal for more closely approximating the echo to be cancelled.
  • the updating of the echo estimate has been inhibited when near end speech signals are being transmitted or when no significant far end energy is being received.
  • the echo estimate was allowed ' to be updated when any significant far end energy was being received, whether it was speech, noise, single frequency tones, multifrequency tones or the like.
  • the canceler includes a self-adapting processor which can adjust to a large number of transfer functions in order to generate the echo estimate which best approximates the echo.
  • a problem with allowing the processor to adjust the transfer function when partial band energy is being received is that although the transfer function arrived at is optimized for the frequency components of the partial band energy it may not be optimum for the remaining frequency components in the frequency band of interest, for example, the voice band.
  • the transfer function adjusted to at frequencies other than those in the partial band energy may be significantly different from the desired optimum adjustment which would be obtained when adjusting on a whole band signal, i.e., speech or Gaussian noise. Consequently, a so-called low return loss path is established at frequencies other than the partial band energy. This low return loss can lead to oscillations in the co nunications circuit. These oscillations are extremely undesirable and must be avoided.
  • the problem of low return loss and other problems of prior echo canceler arrangements results from allowing the canceler to adjust the echo estimate during intervals that partial band far end energy is being received.
  • an energy band discriminator interconnecting the combining network to the circuitry for discriminating between whole band energy and partial band energy in a received signal in the first transmission path and for generating a control signal indicative thereof
  • the energy band discriminator including a first filter circuit for generating a first signal representative of an average value of the received signal, a second filter circuit for generating a second signal representative of a magnitude of the received signal, and control circuit for comparing the first and second signals and to generate a first state of the control signal when the second signal is greater than the. first signal, the control signal being supplied to the second circuitry for enabling supplying the error signal to the adjustable signal processing circuit during intervals that the control signal first state is generated.
  • FIG. 1 shows in simplified block diagram form an echo canceler including an embodiment of the invention
  • FIG. 2 depicts in simplified form details of the energy discriminator employed in FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 shows details of the control circuit employed in the. discriminator of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 4 is a state diagram useful in describing operation of the discriminator of FIG. 2 and control circuit of FIG. 3.
  • FIG. 5 shows details of another version of the control circuit employed in the discriminator of FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 6 depicts in simplified form details of the filter employed in the control circuit of FIG. 5.
  • Echo canceler 100 including an embodiment of the invention is shown in simplified block diagram form in FIG. 1.
  • canceler 100 includes energy discriminator 103 for controllably enabling updating of an echo signal estimate, in accordance with an aspect of the invention, when a far end signal received over a first transmission path includes a certain class of signals including so-called whole band energy. Stated another way, updating of the echo signal estimate is inhibited when the far end signal includes significant energy which is only partial band.
  • an average magnitude of the received signal is compared to a modified magnitude of the received signal and if the modified magnitude is greater than the average, the received signal is considered to include whole band energy. If so, the updating or adapting of the echo signal estimate is enabled. Otherwise, updating of the echo estimate is inhibited.
  • This enables the echo canceler adapting to a transfer function only when the received signal includes whole band energy and inhibits updating the transfer function when only partial band energy is being received, which would result in possible low return loss for other frequency components in the frequency band of interest e.g., the voice frequency band. Consequently, unwanted oscillations and other problems in the transmission network are avoided.
  • canceler 100 includes an adjustable signal processor having a closed loop error control system which is self-adapting in that it automatically tracks signal variation in an outgoing path.
  • canceler 100 employs echo estimator 101 including a transversal filter arrangement for synthesizing a linear approximation of the echo, i.e., an echo estimate.
  • far end incoming signal X(K) is usually supplied from a far end talking party over a first transmission path, e.g., lead 102, to a first input of echo canceler 100 and therein to an input of echo estimator 101, an input of. nergy discriminator 103 and a first input of speech detector 104.
  • Far end signal X(K) may be, for example, a digitally sampled speech signal, where K is an integer identifying the sampling interval.
  • Far end signal X(K) is also supplied via lead 105, perhaps through some conversion circuitry, e.g., an analog-to-digital converter not shown, to a first input of hybrid 106.
  • the input signal to hybrid 106 from lead 105 is usually desirable for the input signal to hybrid 106 from lead 105 to be supplied over bidirectional path 107 to a near listening party.
  • a portion of the hybrid input signal appears on outgoing lead 109 and is reflected to the far end signal source as ' an echo.
  • the echo is supplied from an output of hybrid 106 over lead 109 to a second input of canceler 100 and therein to a second input of speech detector 104, and a first input of combining network 110.
  • Lead 109 may also include conversion apparatus, e.g., an analog-to-digital converter not shown.
  • a second input to combining network 110 is a signal estimate of the echo generated by echo estimator 101.
  • the echo estimate is supplied via lead 111 from an output of echo estimator 101 to the second input of combining network 110.
  • Combining network 110 generates error signal E(K) corresponding to the algebraic difference between the echo estimate and the output from hybrid 109 including the undesirable echo.
  • Error signal E(K) is supplied over a second transmission path, e.g., lead 112 to the far end source and to controllable switching gate 113.
  • Gate 113 is controlled to be enabled or inhibited by an output signal from AND gate 114.
  • a first state of the output from AND gate 114 e.g., a logical 1 enables gate 114 to supply error signal E(K) to estimator 101 while a second state of the output from AND gate 114, e.g., a logical 0 inhibits gate 114 from supplying error signal E(K) to estimator 111.
  • gate 113 was controlled to inhibit supplying error signal E(K) to estimator 101 when significant far end energy was not present, when near end speech was present or when a prescribed relationship between error signal E(K), far end signal X(K) and a status signal indicates the presence of near end speech signals as described in ⁇ . S. Patent 4,129,753.
  • far end signal X(K) could include speech, noise, any of a number of individual tones, multifrequency tones or the like.
  • error signal E(K) was only inhibited when no significant far end energy was detected or when near end speech was detected.
  • error signal E(K) was supplied to estimator 101 during intervals that significant far end energy in signal X(K) was detected.
  • estimator 101 was allowed to adapt or otherwise be adjusted during the intervals that only partial band energy was being received. As indicated above such an adjustment results in undesirable results. Specifically, the transfer function to which estimator 101 may adjust to for the frequency components of the partial band signal would possibly result in a low return loss for other frequency components in the frequency band of interest. This, in turn, may cause unwanted oscillations in the communications circuits. The undesirable oscillations and other problems arise from allowing estimator 101 to be adjusted when partial band energy is present are avoided, in accordance with an aspect of the invention, by employing energy discriminator 103 to distinguish whether far end signal X(K) includes only partial band energy or whole band energy.
  • discriminator 103 If it is determined that X(K) is not whole band energy, e.g., speech or noise, or stated another way, if X(K) is partial band energy, e.g., a single frequency tone, multifrequency tones or the like, discriminator 103 generates an output which inhibits A.ND gate 114. On the other hand, when whole band energy is detected, discriminator 103 generates an output which enables AND gate 114. AND gate 114, in turn, generates a control signal for controlling gate 113 and, hence, the supply of E(K) to estimator 101.
  • a first state of the control signal from gate 114 e.g., a logical 1 enables gate 113 while a second state of the control signal, e.g., a logical 0 inhibits gate 113. Consequently, the echo estimate generated by estimator 101 remains constant during intervals that only partial band energy is present and an undesirable adjustment of the canceler transfer function is avoided.
  • Estimator 101 includes a so-called tapped delay line comprised of delay units 115-1 through 115- for realizing desired delays at the taps corresponding to convenient Nyquist intervals. Therefore, delayed replicas X(K-l) through X(K-N) of incoming far end signal X(K) are generated at the corresponding taps.
  • the signal at each tap position namely X(K-l) through X(K-N) as well as X(K) , is adjusted in response to error signal E(K). More particularly, signals X(K) through X(K-N) are individually weighted in response to E(K) via a corresponding one of adjustment networks 116-0 through 116-N, respectively.
  • Adjustment networks 116-0 through 116-N each include multipliers 117 and 118, and feedback loop 119.
  • Feedback loop 119 adjusts the tap weight to a desired value in a manner which will be apparent to those skilled in the art and explained in the above-noted references.
  • the weighted replicas of X(K) from adjustment networks 116-0 through 116-N are summed via summing network 120 to generate the echo estimate signal approximating the echo to be cancelled.
  • the echo estimate is supplied via lead 111 to the second input of combining network 110.
  • FIG. 2 shows in simplified block diagram form one embodiment of energy discriminator 103 which may be utilized, in accordance with an aspect of the invention, to determine whether significant energy in received signal X(K) is whole band and, hence, not only partial band.
  • the frequency band of interest is the telephone voice frequency band of approximately 300 Hz to 4000 Hz.
  • Whole band energy is, for example, speech,
  • received signal X(K) is supplied via buffer amplifier 201 to rectifier 202. Any one of a number of precision full wave rectifiers known in the art may be employed for this purpose. If X(K) is a digital signal, for example, representative of a ⁇ -law sample, a y-law to linear digital converter, not shown, would be used after rectifier 202. In this example, it is assumed that X(K) is an analog signal.
  • Rectified version MAG of X(K) is supplied to first filter 203 and to second filter 204.
  • Filters 203 and 204 are employed to obtain prescribed characteristics of received signal X(K) in order to distinguish whether X(K) includes whole band energy or only partial band energy.
  • filter 203 is used to obtain an average value of MAG while filter 204 is used to obtain a modified magnitude of MAG.
  • filter 203 is a low pass filter having a first prescribed time constant while filter 204 has a second prescribed time constant. Since filter 204 in this example generates modified magnitude MOD MAG of MAG in accordance with a prescribed criterion, the second time constant is zero and filter 204 is essentially an attenuator.
  • Filter 203 generates essentially the running average of MAG and has a short time constant, illustratively on the order of 8 to 16 milliseconds.
  • filter 203 is an active resistor-capacitor (RC) filter (not shown) having a prescribed exponential characteristic to generate an exponentially mapped past (EMP) version of MAG.
  • EMP exponentially mapped past
  • other filter characteristics may be equally employed in obtaining the EMP of MAG.
  • a variety of arrangements and techniques may be employed for generating the short term running average of signal MAG.
  • one technique is to obtain the exponentially mapped past (EMP) of the signal.
  • EMP averaging is particularly useful in control or detection situations where interest is directed at the recent past behavior of a process and is described in IRE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol. AC-5, January 1960, pages 11-17.
  • the EMP average of a continuous signal is determined by weighting the recent signal occurrence more heavily than the less recent signal occurrence.
  • the relative weighting of a continuous signal is, for example, an exponential function.
  • Both signal EMP and signal MOD MAG are supplied to control circuit 205 for generating in accordance with prescribed criteria signal ADAPT, signal ADAPT in this example is employed to control enabling and disabling AND gate 113 (FIG. 1) and, hence, enabling and disabling updating of the echo estimate being generated by echo estimator 101 (FIG. 1).
  • ADAPT is a first state, e.g., a logical 1 signal X(K) includes whole band energy
  • ADAPT is a second state
  • a logical 0 signal X(K) includes partial band energy.
  • An output from timer 303 is supplied to a first input of AND gate 304.
  • AND gate 304 is disabled until EMP is greater than TH for interval i.
  • Comparator 302 compares MOD MAG to EMP. When MOD
  • FIG. 5 shows details of another type of control circuit 205. Accordingly, EMP(K) is supplied to a first input of digital comparators 501 and 502. MOD MAG(K) is supplied to a second input of comparator 502 while threshold signal TH is supplied to a second input of comparator 501. Comparator 501 is employed to detect whether received signal X(K) includes significant far end
  • X(K) is assumed to include significant energy.
  • TH is 16 of a 4079.5 full scale linear' range.
  • An output from comparator 501 is supplied to timer 503.
  • Filter 505 generates digital output f(K) which is supplied to one input of digital comparator 506. Details of filter 505 are shown in FIG. 5 and described below.
  • Comparator 506 in conjunction with threshold selector 507 provides, in accordance with an aspect of the invention, hysteresis in the decision to- generate the first and second states of control signal ADAPT(K) .
  • the threshold values are selected in relationship to scaling factor F of d (K) in filter 505 as described below.
  • FIG. 6 sho-js in simplified form details of digital filter 505.
  • output d (K) from AND gate 504 is supplied to one input of multiplier 401 while scaling factor F is supplied to a second input to generate scaled version Fd(K) of d (K) .
  • Signal Fd (K) is supplied to a first input of adder 402 while a signal representative of (l- ⁇ )f(K) is supplied to a second input.
  • An output of adder 402 is current sample f(K) and, then, the next sample output is f(K+l).
  • Signal f(K) is supplied to shift register 403.
  • HC(K) 0 shift register 403 is inhibited.
  • Signal ⁇ f(K) is supplied via inverter 405 to a first input of ADDER 404 while signal f(K) is supplied to a second input.
  • ADDER 404 generates a signal representative of (l- ⁇ )f(K) which is supplied to the second input of ADDER 402.
  • the invention is described as being employed in an echo canceler, it can equally be used with other adaptive filters or in any application .in which the type of the received energy must be classified as either partial band or whole band.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Cable Transmission Systems, Equalization Of Radio And Reduction Of Echo (AREA)
  • Filters That Use Time-Delay Elements (AREA)
PCT/US1982/000228 1981-03-05 1982-02-24 Energy band discriminator WO1982003144A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE823235915T DE3235915T1 (de) 1981-03-05 1982-02-24 Energiebanddiskriminator
NL8220092A NL8220092A (nl) 1981-03-05 1982-02-24 Energiebanddiscriminator.

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US06/240,979 US4405840A (en) 1981-03-05 1981-03-05 Echo canceler far end energy discriminator
US240979810305 1981-03-05
US06/240,978 US4426729A (en) 1981-03-05 1981-03-05 Partial band - whole band energy discriminator
US240978 1994-05-10

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1982003144A1 true WO1982003144A1 (en) 1982-09-16

Family

ID=26933878

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1982/000228 WO1982003144A1 (en) 1981-03-05 1982-02-24 Energy band discriminator

Country Status (6)

Country Link
DE (1) DE3235915T1 (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)
FR (1) FR2501439A1 (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)
GB (1) GB2095519B (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)
IT (1) IT1150253B (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)
NL (1) NL8220092A (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)
WO (1) WO1982003144A1 (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0106229A2 (en) * 1982-10-08 1984-04-25 Western Electric Company, Incorporated Adaptive filter including controlled tap gain coefficient drift
EP0145022A2 (en) * 1983-12-15 1985-06-19 Nec Corporation Method and apparatus for cancelling echo
EP0307765A1 (de) * 1987-09-18 1989-03-22 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Anordnung zum Erkennen periodischer Signale für einen Sprach-Echokompensator
WO1991018453A1 (en) * 1989-05-12 1991-11-28 Plessey Semiconductors Limited Audio signal processor circuit

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4468641A (en) * 1982-06-28 1984-08-28 At&T Bell Laboratories Adaptive filter update normalization
GB2256351B (en) * 1991-05-25 1995-07-05 Motorola Inc Enhancement of echo return loss
US5592548A (en) * 1995-05-31 1997-01-07 Qualcomm Incorporated System and method for avoiding false convergence in the presence of tones in a time-domain echo cancellation process

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3499999A (en) * 1966-10-31 1970-03-10 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Closed loop adaptive echo canceller using generalized filter networks
US3937899A (en) * 1975-01-30 1976-02-10 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Tone detector using spectrum parameter estimation
US4028496A (en) * 1976-08-17 1977-06-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Digital speech detector
US4072830A (en) * 1976-10-04 1978-02-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Variable phase shifter for adaptive echo cancellers
US4129753A (en) * 1977-12-09 1978-12-12 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Echo canceller using feedback to improve speech detector performance

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS5842663B2 (ja) * 1976-02-06 1983-09-21 日本電気株式会社 反響消去装置
US4243959A (en) * 1979-06-21 1981-01-06 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Adaptive filter with tap coefficient leakage
US4277645A (en) * 1980-01-25 1981-07-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Multiple variable threshold speech detector

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3499999A (en) * 1966-10-31 1970-03-10 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Closed loop adaptive echo canceller using generalized filter networks
US3937899A (en) * 1975-01-30 1976-02-10 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Tone detector using spectrum parameter estimation
US4028496A (en) * 1976-08-17 1977-06-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Digital speech detector
US4072830A (en) * 1976-10-04 1978-02-07 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Variable phase shifter for adaptive echo cancellers
US4129753A (en) * 1977-12-09 1978-12-12 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Echo canceller using feedback to improve speech detector performance

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0106229A2 (en) * 1982-10-08 1984-04-25 Western Electric Company, Incorporated Adaptive filter including controlled tap gain coefficient drift
EP0121557A1 (en) * 1982-10-08 1984-10-17 Western Electric Co ADAPTIVE FILTER COMPRISING A CONTROLLED DRIFT OF THE GAIN GAIN COEFFICIENT.
EP0121557A4 (en) * 1982-10-08 1985-04-25 Western Electric Co ADAPTIVE FILTER COMPRISING A CONTROLLED DRIFT OF THE GAIN GAIN COEFFICIENT.
EP0106229A3 (en) * 1982-10-08 1985-05-15 Western Electric Company, Incorporated Adaptive filter including controlled tap gain coefficient drift
EP0145022A2 (en) * 1983-12-15 1985-06-19 Nec Corporation Method and apparatus for cancelling echo
EP0145022A3 (en) * 1983-12-15 1986-10-08 Nec Corporation Method and apparatus for cancelling echo
EP0307765A1 (de) * 1987-09-18 1989-03-22 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Anordnung zum Erkennen periodischer Signale für einen Sprach-Echokompensator
WO1991018453A1 (en) * 1989-05-12 1991-11-28 Plessey Semiconductors Limited Audio signal processor circuit
US5453976A (en) * 1989-05-12 1995-09-26 Gpt Limited Audio signal processor circuit

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
IT1150253B (it) 1986-12-10
GB2095519B (en) 1985-05-22
IT8219972A0 (it) 1982-03-04
DE3235915T1 (de) 1983-11-17
FR2501439B1 (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png) 1984-12-21
NL8220092A (nl) 1983-02-01
DE3235915C2 (US20020095090A1-20020718-M00002.png) 1987-06-19
FR2501439A1 (fr) 1982-09-10
GB2095519A (en) 1982-09-29

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4491701A (en) Adaptive filter including a far end energy discriminator
US4757527A (en) Echo canceller
US4998241A (en) Echo canceller
CA1221430A (en) Fast convergence method and system for echo canceller
US4591669A (en) Adaptive filter update gain normalization
JP3652705B2 (ja) 時間領域エコー消去処理においてトーンの存在に起因する誤集束を回避するためのシステムおよび方法
US4636586A (en) Speakerphone with adaptive cancellation of room echoes
KR100458971B1 (ko) 노이즈임펄스영향감소방법,수신기,및전송기수신기시스템
US5418817A (en) Adaptive equalization system and method
US5852661A (en) Adaptive echo cancellation used with echo suppression to reduce short and long duration echoes
US3735055A (en) Method for improving the settling time of a transversal filter adaptive echo canceller
JP3877882B2 (ja) 適応フィルタ
US4426729A (en) Partial band - whole band energy discriminator
US4554417A (en) Tandem adaptive echo canceler arrangement
US4467441A (en) Adaptive filter including controlled tap coefficient leakage
US4405840A (en) Echo canceler far end energy discriminator
US4628157A (en) Bidirectional adaptive voice frequency repeater
CA1252843A (en) Bidirectional adaptive voice frequency repeater
WO1982003144A1 (en) Energy band discriminator
US4468640A (en) Adaptive filter update normalization
EP0422796A2 (en) An adaptive FIR filter having restricted coefficient ranges
JPS602810B2 (ja) エコ−消去方法
US6137882A (en) Adaptive echo cancellation method
KR950005942B1 (ko) 디지탈 적응필터의 동작영역 판단장치
EP0117626A2 (en) Improvements in or relating to adaptive filter arrangements

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Designated state(s): DE JP NL

RET De translation (de og part 6b)

Ref document number: 3235915

Country of ref document: DE

Date of ref document: 19831117

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 3235915

Country of ref document: DE