Analog signal processing is commonly performed in many applications. One example is a prosthetic hearing device which processes ambient sound to supplement or provide hearing ability to individuals with various types of hearing impairments.
In recent years, rehabilitation of sensorineural hearing disorders with implantable electronic systems has acquired major importance. In particular, this applies to the group of patients in which hearing has completely failed due to accident, illness or other effects, or in which hearing is congenitally non-functional. If, in these cases, only the inner ear (cochlea), and not the neural auditory path which leads to the brain, is affected, the functional auditory nerve may be directly stimulated with electrical stimulation signals to provide a hearing perception, which may lead to sound or speech comprehension.
In these so-called Cochlear™ implants, an array of stimulation electrodes is inserted into the recipient's cochlea. This array is controlled by an electronic system encased in a hermetically sealed, biocompatible housing implanted in the mastoid. The electronic system essentially contains decoder and driver circuits for the stimulation electrodes. Acoustic sound reception and conversion of acoustic signals into electrical signals typically takes place externally in a speech processor worn by the recipient. The speech processor superimposes the preprocessed signals, properly coded, on a high frequency carrier signal which, via inductive coupling, is transmitted transcutaneously to the implant through the closed skin. A microphone is located outside of the body, typically in a behind-the-ear housing worn on the external ear. The microphone is typically connected to the speech processor by a cable.
With prosthetic hearing devices as well as other similar or related audio signal processing applications, there has been a trend to process digital representations of an analog signal rather than the analog signal itself. This process, commonly referred to as digital signal processing (DSP), involves the conversion of analog signals to digital signals. A/D conversion is often performed along with other analog signal conditioning or amplification operations. As such, these initial operations are sometimes referred to as front-end operations, and the hardware and/or software components that perform such initial operations are sometimes collectively referred to as a “front end” of the speech processing pipeline.
In one aspect of the invention, an analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion circuit for converting an analog signal to a digital signal is disclosed, the circuit comprising: a controllable amplifier for amplifying the analog signal received at an input of said amplifier in response to a first control signal, and for generating an amplified analog signal; a low dynamic range A/D converter for converting said amplified analog signal to an intermediary digital signal; a controllable digital multiplier circuit for adjusting said intermediary digital signal in response to a second control signal to generate said digital signal; and an automatic gain control (AGC) component for generating said first control signal to cause said amplified analog signal to be within said dynamic range of said A/D converter, and for generating said second control signal to cause said adjusting of said intermediary digital signal to compensate for said amplification by said amplifier.
In another aspect of the present invention, a prosthetic hearing implant is disclosed, the implant comprising: a microphone adapted to generate an analog signal representing a received acoustical signal; a speech processing unit configured to generate stimulation signals based on said analog signal, said speech processing unit comprising a low-power high-dynamic range analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion circuit having a low dynamic range A/D conversion circuit for converting an analog signal to a digital signal; and a stimulator unit configured to apply said stimulation signals to one or more electrodes implanted in the cochlea.
In a further aspect of the invention, a low-power, high-dynamic range, analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion circuit for converting an analog signal to a digital signal is disclosed, the circuit comprising: amplifier means for amplifying an amplitude of an analog signal received at an input of said amplifier means in response to a first control signal, and for generating an amplified analog signal; a low dynamic range A/D converter for converting said amplified analog signal to an intermediary digital signal; digital multiplier circuit means for adjusting said intermediary digital signal in response to a second control signal to generate said digital signal; and an control circuit means for generating said first control signal to cause said amplified analog signal to be within said dynamic range of said A/D converter, and for generating said second control signal to cause said adjusting of said intermediate digital signal to compensate for said amplification by said amplifier means.
In a still further aspect of the invention, a method for converting an analog signal to a digital signal, the method comprising: amplifying the analog signal in response to a first control signal; converting said amplified analog signal to an intermediary digital signal using a low dynamic range A/D converter; adjusting said intermediary digital signal, in response to a second control signal, to generate the digital signal; generating said first control signal, to cause said amplified analog signal to be within said dynamic range of said A/D converter; and generating said second control signal, to cause said adjusting of said intermediary digital signal to compensate for said amplification.
Illustrative embodiments of the present invention are described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present invention is generally directed to a low power, high resolution, analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion circuit. The low power consumption of this conversion circuit is attributable to the fact that it is constructed using a low dynamic range A/D converter. As is known by persons of ordinary skill in the art, a low dynamic range A/D converter component uses less power than a higher resolution A/D converter since analog signals are converted into fewer discrete values by a low dynamic range A/D converter as compared to its higher resolution counterpart.
Low dynamic range refers to a subset of the full dynamic range of sound. Within the full dynamic range of sounds, humans are able to perceive and comfortably withstand a subset of that full dynamic range, typically between 20 to 90 dB. In certain embodiments, the low dynamic range A/D converter has a dynamic range of less than or equal to approximately 72 dB. In another embodiment, the dynamic range is less than 65 dB. In a further embodiment, the dynamic range is less than 60 dB.
Typically, a 6-bit to 12-bit A/D converter may be considered a low dynamic range A/D converter for converting normal speech. However, other A/D converters having more or less bits may also be considered a low dynamic range A/D converter, so long as the number of discrete values produced is insufficient to adequately represent the speech with a precision that allows a signal recreated from the digital representation to be sufficiently similar to the original signal, for example, as perceived by an average listener.
Embodiments of the present invention may be used, for example, in many different digital signal processing (DSP) applications which may benefit from relatively low power consumption while performing analog-to-digital conversion. Such applications include, but are not limited to, prosthetic hearing devices, portable audio equipment such as wireless microphones, and others. The term “prosthetic hearing device” refers to any device that is able to assist a recipient's ability to hear sounds, improve that recipient's ability to hear sounds, or provide medical or therapeutic treatment to the auditory system. Typically such implants are used with recipients who experience some form of conductive or sensorineural hearing loss. Such devices include, but are not limited to, hearing aids, acoustic/mechanical stimulators, electrical stimulators, or hybrids thereof, such as electric-acoustic stimulators.
Examples of acoustic/mechanical stimulators include middle-ear implants, vibrating implants, or bone-anchored hearing aids. The operation of an electrical stimulator is well understood in the art, and is described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 4,532,930, the entire contents and disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein. Examples of electrical prosthetic hearing implants include the Nucleus™ implant and Freedom™ implant manufactured by Cochlear Limited. The prosthetic hearing device may comprise components which are completely implanted or may comprise a mix of components which are external, partially implanted or totally implanted. The prosthetic hearing implant may stimulate one or both ears, depending on the requirements of the recipient. One exemplary application in which embodiments of the present invention may be advantageously implemented is a prosthetic hearing device such as a fully- or partially-implantable Cochlear™ implant (commonly referred to as Cochlear™ device, Cochlear™ implant system, and the like; “cochlear implant” herein).
Internal components 124 comprise an internal receiver unit 132 having an internal coil 320 that receives and transmits power and coded signals received from external assembly 122 to a stimulator unit 134 to apply the coded signal to cochlear 115 via an implanted electrode assembly 140. Electrode assembly 140 enters cochlea 115 at cochleostomy region 142 and has one or more electrodes 150 positioned to be substantially aligned with portions of tonotopically-mapped cochlea 115. Signals generated by stimulator unit 134 are typically applied by an array 144 of electrodes 150 to cochlea 115, thereby stimulating auditory nerve 116. As one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate from the present disclosure, embodiments of the present invention may be advantageously implemented in a variety of devices as described elsewhere herein. Although the cochlear implant described above with reference to
Filter bank 304 receives digital signal 340 and generates one or more band-pass filtered digital signals 310 representative of analog audio signal 308. Band-pass filtered digital signals 310 are provided to digital signal processor (DSP) 305 of speech processor unit 200. DSP 305, in one embodiment, detects instantaneous energy of the audio signal in the frequency range of each band-pass filtered signal 310.
DSP 305 may select a number of maxima (i.e., the channels having the largest amplitude) in accordance with one of a variety of speech processing techniques such as the Spectral PEAK Extraction (SPEAK) or Advanced Combination Encoders (ACE) speech coding strategies or, alternatively, may implement a CIS strategy where all filter channels are used for stimulating electrode array 144. DSP 305 generates filtered channel signals and stimulation rate information, collectively 312, and presents them to a stimulator 306.
Stimulator 306 determines stimulation signals 314 for stimulating electrodes 150 of electrode array 144, including, for example, the rate of stimulation, the group of electrodes to be stimulated, and the current amplitude for stimulating electrodes 150. The received information is mapped to electrodes 150 of electrode array 144 to generate a stimulus current level for each stimulus to be applied in accordance with stimulus pulse timings. This information is provided to stimulator unit 134 through internal coil 320 via an RF signal 318 generated by transmitter coil 130.
A/D conversion circuit 400 receives analog signal 308 and converts the analog signal to a digital signal 340. The inputs of A/D converter 404 and comparator 406 are connected in parallel to the output of amplifier 402. Amplifier 402 is a controllable amplifier that amplifies analog audio signal 308 generated by microphone 125 in response to a first control signal 414 to produce amplified analog signal 409.
A low dynamic range A/D converter 404 converts the amplified analog signal 409 into an intermediary digital signal 416. A/D converter 404 converts amplified analog signal 409 into discrete digital values, and outputs intermediary digital signal 416. A/D converter has a sample rate that is a multiple of Fs, which is represented as M*Fs, or a multiple of M*Fs, which is represented as N*Fs herein. This is described in greater detail below.
Intermediary digital signal 416 is provided to a digital multiplier circuit 411 constructed and arranged to scale the intermediary digital signal to compensate for the amplification performed at amplifier circuit component 402. Digital multiplier circuit 411 contains any combination of circuit elements that enable it to perform the requisite digital gain compensation to compensate for the amplification applied by amplifier 402. Digital multiplier 411 performs such signal scaling in response to a second control signal 418, and generates the compensated intermediate digital signal at the output of conversion circuit 400 as digital signal 340. As will be described below, in various embodiments, digital multiplier 411 may be implemented with one or more bit shift registers and/or downsamplers. It should be appreciated, however, that digital multiplier circuit 402 may be implemented with any combination of circuit elements to achieve a desired scaling. In those embodiments in which the scaling is a factor of 2, then shift registers are likely to be implemented, although that need not be the case in all embodiments of the present invention.
An Automatic Gain Control (AGC) circuit element 408 generates first control signal 414 to cause amplified analog signal 409 to be within the dynamic range of A/D converter 404. AGC 408 also generates second control signal 418 to cause digital multiplier 411 to compensate for the amplification performed by amplifier 402. AGC 408 generates first and second control signals 414, 418 in response to amplified analog signal 409 which is processed through a comparator 406. Comparator 406 is connected between amplifier 402 and AGC 408, and compares amplified analog signal 409 to one or more programmable values to determine whether the value of amplified analog signal 409 is below a minimum or over a maximum threshold value.
Thus, if first control signal 414 sent by AGC 408 to amplifier 402 causes the amplitude of analog signal 308 to be increased by a multiple of +6 dB (which is performed by multiplying the analog signal amplitude by a factor of 2), then second control signal 418 sent by AGC 408 to bit shift register 410 causes intermediary digital signal 416 to be decreased by the same factor of 2. The opposite is also true, where if the amplitude of analog signal 308 is decreased by a multiple of −6 dB, the intermediary digital signal 416 will be increased by the same factor of 2 by bit shift register 410.
Referring again to
Having downsampler 412 after bit shift register 410, as in
Having downsampler 414 electrically coupled after bit shift register 410, as in
Having downsamplers 412 and 414 after bit shift register 410, as in
It should be noted that although the embodiments depicted in
By using the above described coordinated amplification and compensating bit shifting and this invention, A/D conversion circuit 400 is able to generate digital signal 310 of input analog signal 308 with a higher dynamic range than would conventionally be possible when using low dynamic range A/D converter 404 without this invention. At the same time, low dynamic range A/D converter 404, along with the conversion circuit 400, will consume less power, as previously described. In order to carry out this invention, additional components such as AGC 408 are necessary, and those additional components will consume power. However, the additional power consumption caused by the introduction of AGC 408, in addition with the other circuitry components that are necessary to properly implement the invention, is still lower than the power consumption of using a high dynamic range A/D converter without AGC 408 and associated circuitry components. In other words, rather than using a high dynamic range A/D converter alone to convert analog signal 308 from microphone 125 into digital form, the present invention uses a low resolution (and therefore lower power consuming) A/D converter 404 in conjunction with the various components as described, to consume lower power while achieving a signal conversion of comparable quality.
While various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant art that various changes in form and detail can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, an anti-alias filter (AAF) may be placed before amplifier 402, in order to avoid aliasing. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents. All patents and publications discussed herein are incorporated in their entirety by reference thereto.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/604,853, filed Nov. 28, 2006, entitled, “Analog to Digital (A/D) Conversion Circuit Having a Low Dynamic Range A/D Converter,” which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/740,466 entitled, “Analog to Digital (A/D) Conversion Circuit,” filed Nov. 29, 2005, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/859,261, entitled, “Analog to Digital (A/D) Conversion Circuit,” filed Nov. 16, 2006, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090028365 A1 | Jan 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11604853 | Nov 2006 | US |
Child | 12241879 | US |