Alec Reeves (1902-1971) invented pulse-code modulation PCM in 1937 when he worked
for the International Telephone and Telegraph Company. This is a very early invention in the
history of electronics, since it is only a few years after Edwin Armstrong invented wideband FM,
a method of high-quality radio broadcasting. Reeves, instead of following tradition by
sending an electrical current being proportional with the sound level, proposed that the
electrical sound signal be sampled and digitised at regular intervals.
Then the analogue value of each sample would be rounded to the nearest integer value,
which, in turn, is represented by a binary number and transmitted as binary on-off pulses.
In principle, the binary, two-level, signalling was a return to the simple, robust technique used
by the telegraph. Noise immunity and fidelity benefit tremendously because the sound signal is no
longer stored as a delicate analogue signal but as a much more robust sequence of binary numbers.
Because PCM is a method of representing an analogue signal in digital form, it is particularly well
adapted to work directly with digital data-processing equipment.
In his 1937 patent, Reeves formulated the major advantages of digital PCM transmission, namely
- Quality depends on conversion steps ONLY
- Quality independent of transmission media
- Compatibility with different media and traffic (video, audio, and data)
- Low cost
- New features can easily be embedded.
These are gigantic and also visionary conclusions. Reeves showed his enormous engineering
foresight, as there are two essential assumptions that are implicit in the above
characteristics. Firstly, each quantized sample can be transmitted with arbitrarily small
probability of error. It was absolutely not clear in 1937 that this could be accomplished
in theory; let alone that he, or others, knew about practical methods for achieving error-free
transmission. There was no research, not even by an obscure Russian mathematician, on the topic
of error correcting codes. It would take another ten years and a
world war, before research on error free digital communication would take off.
Secondly, he assumed that conversion from the analog to the digital domain, and vice versa,
could be done, either in theory or practice, with arbitrary small accuracy by use of
sufficiently frequent sampling, and by quantizing each sample with a sufficiently large
number of levels. Early theoretical work by mathematicians had been published,
but we may well assume that Reeves was unaware of that literature.
A notable disadvantage of PCM is the required high (analogue) bandwidth of the transmission or
storage system. And though Reeves' extraordinary patent of 1937 showed how this
might be done in theory, the valve-based technology of the time was not up to the job.
Pulse Code Modulation could not be implement economically until the invention of the
transistor decades later. But economy was not always a priority. PCM was first used
by the armed forces for the scrambled radio system on which Churchill and Roosevelt
talked in total secrecy for much of World War 2, SIGSALY.
He was awarded over 100 patents, as well as a CBE.
Last updated: 07-29-2005 23:13:01