Harmonicity Meter

Contains ads
4.6
427 reviews
100K+
Downloads
Content rating
Everyone
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About this app

Measure the Harmonic to Noise Ratio (Harmonicity) from your microphone.

Harmonicity is a measure of the sound energy in the harmonics relative to the rest of the spectrum.
Harmocity varies with age, gender & which vowel you pronounce. Higher harmonicity values indicate a purer sound. Whilst lower jitter and shimmer values indicate a purer sound.

This meter is supposed to be used with a continuous consistent sound, e.g. Pronoucing a vowel, or a tone from a speaker/instrument. Rapidly changing tone/sound will give nonsensical output.

FOR INDICATION ONLY. Harmonicity will vary depending on how close the source is to the microphone. Microphone sensitivity varies with frequency and from device to device. Even amoungst scientific literature, it is difficult to find consistency in absolute reported values.

Jitter is a measure of the frequency variation of the sound. The relative jitter is shown as a %.

Shimmer is a measure of the amplitude variation of the sound. The relative shimmer is shown as a %.
Autodetects sound – App will only start measuring when a sound is detected.

Averaging - After 0.7s, the app will start averaging the Harmonicity, Jitter, Shimmer and freqency values. This will continue until the sound is stopped at which point the last 0.7s of data is removed from the averaged values.

Musical Note – The current detected frequency is converted into a note based on western 12 tone equal temperament. Use to tune your guitar or other instrument if you wish.

Pause button – Useful if in a noisy environment and measurement doesn't auto stop.

FFT Spectrum – Autoscaling Sound Intensity between 0 and 2 kHz.

Range: 100 Hz to 2 kHz fundamental harmonic frequency detection.


Technical bit:
The fast fourier transform (size 8192) is performed on the last 0.74s of data to produce a frequency spectrum (0 to 5.5 kHz with 1.35Hz resolution). This frequency spectrum is windowed between 100 and 4 kHz with linear fall offs to zero at 50 and 5 kHz. The fundamental frequency is determined from polynomial fitting to peaks. The harmonic energy is determined from the sum of the FFT signal at the harmonic freuquency plus 8 Hz either side. The noise is the sum of the rest of the FFT. The ratio of harmonic to noise energy is the Harmoicity and is displayed in decibels.

More technical details can be found on the website.
Updated on
17 Jan 2024

Data safety

Safety starts with understanding how developers collect and share your data. Data privacy and security practices may vary based on your use, region and age. The developer provided this information and may update it over time.
No data shared with third parties
Learn more about how developers declare sharing
This app may collect these data types
App activity, App info and performance and Device or other IDs
Data is encrypted in transit
Data can’t be deleted

Ratings and reviews

4.6
384 reviews
A Google user
24 December 2018
I'd been wanting something like this but didn't know it existed so I hadn't been looking. I found it by accident because I'd been searching frequency analyzers for a way to detect the frequency of my instruments. But analyzers are cluttered with controls and options that I don't need and it can be difficult to read the data through the graphs and flashing lights. This tool provides exactly what I was looking for in an analyzer and I'll also be able to use it for the functions it was designed for. It's simple to use, easy to read, and accurate. The app rating system only offers stars but my personal rating is "Hidden treasure."
29 people found this review helpful
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A Google user
20 January 2020
This is so good because it will give you one hz number only. No numbers jumping all over the place. Good for a simple mind like I have. It will not give a reading at all if the tone is not pure and clean. Good for me looking into chakra healing sounds. So if there's no reading, the tone is poor quality or dirty, and best of all, I've found it to be accurate to within 1 Hz.
17 people found this review helpful
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A Google user
1 April 2019
The best app for sound test.
6 people found this review helpful
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What's new

v1.40 Updated to use newer code libraries to better target and run reliably on devices in 2024.