Audio Video Term

DSP

DSP is an audio video term for Chicago-area smart home, theater, and commercial AV projects.

DSP is digital signal processing used to tune audio levels, equalization, delays, crossovers, and room-specific performance.

Example of DSP

A family can stream music in the kitchen, patio, and primary suite at different volumes while controlling each room from the same app or keypad. In that kind of Davis whole-home audio project, the term DSP would describe digital signal processing used to tune audio levels, equalization, delays, crossovers, and room-specific performance. Davis would use that understanding to account for speaker zones, amplifier channels, streaming sources, volume controls, and app or keypad access, then test the result in the actual room, document the related components, and show the client how to use the feature without needing to manage the technical details behind it.

Related Terms

Frequently Asked Question

What does DSP mean?

DSP means digital signal processing used to tune audio levels, equalization, delays, crossovers, and room-specific performance. In a Davis Audio & Video project, it matters because the goal is not just adding technology; it is making the system understandable, reliable, and easy to operate.