Version

menu_open
Warning: you were redirected to the latest documentation corresponding to your major release ( 2023.1.8.8601 ). Should you wish to access your specific version's documentation, please download the offline documentation from the Audiokinetic Launcher and check the Offline Documentation option in Wwise Authoring.

Voice Inspector

The Voice Inspector provides detailed information about Volume, LPF, and HPF (the "value") for selected voice paths processed by a sound. The information displays the values of all contributors to the hierarchy, from the source to the Master Audio Bus, and the runtime value modifications, such as Event Actions, transitions, distance attenuation, and cone angles.

To load the view's information, you must have captured information and selected a point in time from the capture. The Voice Graph and the Contribution List panels then display the corresponding voice information.

[Note]Note

Two types of data must be profiled: Voices and Voice Inspector. If the former is not enabled, both the Voice Monitor and the Voice Inspector will be empty. If the latter is not enabled, then the Voice Inspector will only display the following message: 'This view needs "Voice Inspector Data". Enable it in the Profiler Settings.' Conveniently, the Profiler Settings view can be opened by clicking either the link in the message or the View Settings button in the titlebar of the view.

Interface Element

Description

Click the View Settings icon in the upper right corner of the view to prompt the Profiler Settings, where you can specify the type of data to capture. You must enable the Voice Inspector Data to view information in the Voice Inspector.

Voice Graph

This panel displays the same content as the Voices Graph tab of the Advanced Profiler, namely the optimized bus hierarchy as it exists in the lower engine at runtime for each of the voices or playback instances managed by the sound engine. It does not, however, have object-specific or text-based filters.

View

Click the View select button to show or hide from the graph the following elements:

  • Game Objects: Displays or hides the Game Objects in the graph view.

  • Events: Displays or hides the Events in the graph view.

  • Targets: Displays or hides the Targets in the graph view.

    A Target refers to the object targeted for playing by the Event. The playing of the Target object triggers its child sources. In the case where a Random Container is the Target, enabling this view option will show both the Random Container targeted by the Event and the resulting source object.

  • Virtual Voices: Displays or hides the virtual voices in the graph view.

  • Devices: Displays or hides the final output devices in the graph view.

  • Volumes: Displays or hides the Volume values in the graph view.

  • LPF: Displays or hides the LPF values in the graph view.

  • HPF: Displays or hides the HPF values in the graph view.

Graph view

Displays the structure and contents of each voice generated by the sound engine. For more information, see the Graph view section of the Voices Graph tab reference documentation.

Contribution List

Opens a search field where standard alphanumeric entries filter out unmatching elements from the view. Learn more in Using tables.

Click the Close icon to the left of the search icon to close the search field and remove the filter.

[Note]Note

The searches do not include elements in collapsed nodes of the List View, Query Editor, MIDI Keymap Editor, and Reference View.

Name

The name of the objects which make up the final values of the selected voice.

The first row always displays Σ Final Value for the sum total of the Volume, LPF, and HPF of the selected voice.

The child rows have nodes of Wwise objects, such as busses, containers, and sounds. Further child object details can be found under the nodes, covering things such as Attenuations and their emitter-listener pairs. The final child level covers the name of object properties, such as Bus Volume and Voice Volume, which have been changed by a Driver.

Driver

The cause of a possible change in the Final Value for the voice's Volume, LPF, or HPF. It might be a game parameter or a Wwise element (interpreted in the broadest sense to cover an object, property, or setting).

Possible Drivers:

  • Music Segment Envelope (If a Music Track has volume curves.)

  • Background Music Mute

  • Cone Attenuation

  • Distance Attenuation

  • Ducking

  • Events/Actions (Summary of Set Volume Actions—or LPF or HPF.)

  • Fade in/out (For all fade-in/out due to Events.)

  • HDR Gain (When an HDR window changes the volume.)

  • Live Edit (When the user makes a modification while connected to a game.)

  • Modulator (Shows the Modulator name and icon—can be LFO, Time, or Envelope.)

  • Mute (Shown when a Mute Action was triggered. Disappears with Unmute.)

  • Obstruction (Shown under Attenuation nodes.)

  • Occlusion (Shown under Attenuation nodes.)

  • Pause (Shown when a Pause Action was triggered. Disappears when Resumed.

  • Project Value (Value of the property as shown in the Property Editor. Used only when profiling locally—not connected.)

  • Randomizer

  • RTPC (Shows the RTPC name.)

  • SoundBank Value (Taken from the SoundBank.)

  • State (Shows the State Group name.)

  • Normalization (Either loudness normalization or downmix normalization.)

  • Switch

  • Propagation Path Gain (Adjustments made by Spatial Audio, such as fading in/out contributing paths.)

  • Room Send (Game-Defined Auxiliary Sends set by Spatial Audio.)

  • SetEarlyReflectionsVolume

  • SetGameObjectAuxSendValues

  • SetGameObjectOutputBusVolume

  • Transmission Loss

  • Diffraction

  • User-Defined Sends

[Tip]Tip

For further information on these drivers, see Notes on how certain properties are reported.

Driver Value

The corresponding value of the particular driver.

Volume

The impact in dB, rounded to the nearest decimal, of the driver on the voice volume.

LPF

The % impact of the driver to establish a low-pass filter cutoff frequency on the voice. Refer to Wwise LPF and HPF value cutoff frequencies for the corresponding frequency.

HPF

The % impact of the drivers to establish a high-pass filter cutoff frequency on the voice. Refer to Wwise LPF and HPF value cutoff frequencies for the corresponding frequency.


Was this page helpful?

Need Support?

Questions? Problems? Need more info? Contact us, and we can help!

Visit our Support page

Tell us about your project. We're here to help.

Register your project and we'll help you get started with no strings attached!

Get started with Wwise