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No best answer has yet been selected by Thunderchild. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Joint stereo can generally be one of two methods:
1. An alternative name for M/S stereo, (Mid/Side), or Matrix Stereo, combining two channels, one of which is the combined mono signal, and the other of which is the difference between left and right.
So M = L + R, and S = L - R.
This way both left and right can be recreated by either M + S (gives left signal) or M - S (gives left signal).
M/S Stereo is often used in professional audio, specifically broadcasting, as it provides a ready mono signal to cope with mono devices.
2. 'Intensity stereo', which is where the parts of the signal that a human would be unable to localise, (ie. it doesn't matter where they are in the stereo field), ie Bass, are recorded in mono to save file size. This isn't used in professional application, only to reduce file size in 'lossy' audio codecs. It's mostly likely this is the term 'Joint Stereo' is referring to.
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