The present disclosure relates to a device and method for detection and compensation for an oblique ear-probe insertion in especially hearing testing diagnostic setups. More particularly the disclosure relates to detecting an oblique ear-probe insertion from an ear-probe measurement and compensating for its effect on the ear-canal reflectance.
Ear-canal reflectance has proved to be a useful quantity for identifying conductive hearing disorders, calibrating stimulus levels in situ, and estimating the pressure emitted from the ear. Measurements in the ear canal using an ear probe are affected by evanescent modes, and the ear-canal reflectance further depends on the characteristic impedance at the position of the ear probe. The characteristic impedance of a uniform waveguide is closely related to its cross-sectional area, which inherently varies between different ear canals and with insertion depth. Evanescent modes occur when an acoustic flow is injected into a waveguide (such as an ear canal) through a narrow aperture as non-propagating modes are elicited, and are closely related to a geometrical mismatch between the ear probe and the waveguide. Evanescent modes and incorrect estimates or assumptions of characteristic impedance thus introduce errors into the ear-canal reflectance and should be compensated for and estimated, respectively, to obtain accurate measurements of ear-canal reflectance, especially toward higher frequencies.
An additional factor introducing inaccuracies into the ear-canal reflectance are related to the insertion angle of the ear probe into the ear canal. Ear probes are usually inserted into the ear canal using a rubber or foam ear tip and, while the calibration procedure constitutes a controlled setup, it is difficult to take non-invasive precautions to avoid oblique ear-probe insertions into ear canals. While the ear canal in itself is inherently non-uniform, it is further not a straight waveguide. Placing the ear-probe tip at the position of a bend of the ear canal can result in an oblique insertion although it appears to be perpendicular as seen from the outside. Thus, for avoiding a contribution in the ear-canal reflectance from errors arising in, e.g., reflectance measurements due to the oblique probe insertion, there exists a need for a solution that allows for detecting and compensating for an oblique ear-probe insertion in a diagnostic setup.
Accordingly, a method and diagnostic device are disclosed that can detect if the physical features (i.e., especially insertion angle of the ear probe) in front of the ear probe provide the conditions suitable for defining and estimating the characteristic impedance of the ear canal or a waveguide simulating the ear canal, and thereby obtaining a valid reflectance measure using the estimated characteristic impedance.
That is, a method for detecting an oblique ear probe insertion into an acoustic waveguide, such as an ear canal, is disclosed. The method comprises the steps of:
By providing a method as presented herein, it is possible not only to provide an estimate of the degree of obliqueness of the ear-probe insertion in a waveguide, such as an ear canal, but also to compensate for such obliqueness. This is important, since a plurality of diagnostic measures in, e.g., hearing diagnostics depend on an accurate estimate of the characteristic impedance of the ear canal to calculate an accurate estimate of, e.g., ear-canal reflectance, stimulus levels, and acoustic responses emitted from the ear. Thus, with this method it is possible to evaluate an ear-probe insertion from measurements of an ear-probe response, which allows, e.g., an audiologist to evaluate, or a predefined threshold algorithm to detect, if a measurement in an ear canal is accurate enough in the view of hearing diagnostic evaluation.
It should be noted that an acoustic characteristic impedance is used to describe a transmission line, such as an ear canal, and is defined as the ratio of sound pressure and volume flow of a single wave propagating along the line; that is, a wave travelling in one direction in the absence of reflections in the other direction. The characteristic impedance is interesting in hearing diagnostics when a description of the ear canal is needed for the diagnostic setups, since it is used in a plurality of these calculations. The characteristic impedance of a uniform transmission line is closely related to the cross-sectional area of the transmission line. Thus, the characteristic impedance of an ear canal is usually unknown and needs to be estimated based on, e.g., ear-probe measurements and/or acoustic Thevenin-equivalent parameters of the ear probe characterizing the ear probe.
Accordingly, in an embodiment, the waveguide is an ear canal of a human test person, for which a hearing test or diagnosis is relevant.
In the method, it is relevant that the stimulus is configured so that an efficient ear-probe response can be recorded, thus, in an embodiment, the stimulus is configured as pure tones, chirps, sweeps, pseudo-random noise, or a similar acoustic stimulus.
In more detail, the method of detecting an oblique ear probe insertion is in an embodiment utilizing a Hilbert-transform approach to estimate the characteristic impedance. That is, in an embodiment, the characteristic impedance is estimated by using a Hilbert transform of the imaginary part and the real part of a reflectance or an impedance measure. Thus, prior to evaluating the estimated characteristic impedance, the real and imaginary parts of the reflectance or an impedance measure is calculated from a Hilbert transform. In the method described herein, the unknown characteristic impedance of the waveguide, preferably an ear canal, at a plurality of different frequencies is found by using the Hilbert transform as described in applicants co-pending published application EP3288294.
Furthermore, in an alternative setup, other methods for estimating the characteristic impedance can be considered, preferably it should be noted that methods assessing the causality of a reflectance measure or an impedance measure using, e.g., a Fourier transform, an inverse Fourier transform, or a Hilbert transform, are considered preferable methods for estimating the characteristic impedance, since such methods can separate the local physical features of an acoustic waveguide at the position of the ear probe from features further down the waveguide. However, methods for estimating the characteristic impedance, based on a different principle than assessing causality, may be used.
In order to estimate the characteristic impedance for a plurality of frequency ranges of the impedance or reflectance measure, the method is configured such that the plurality of frequencies ranges are defined from a set of truncation frequencies.
In more detail, the truncation frequencies may in an embodiment be determined from points that allow differentiability in a Hermitian-symmetric frequency spectrum of the impedance or reflectance measure. By finding the points that allow differentiability in a Hermitian-symmetric frequency spectrum of the impedance or reflectance measure, errors in the estimated of characteristic impedance due to a finite impedance measurement bandwidth may be avoided.
Alternatively, the plurality of frequency ranges may be defined from the suitable requirements of any other method for estimating the characteristic impedance or be arbitrarily predefined.
Based on the estimated characteristic impedances for a plurality of frequencies and found as described, the degree of oblique probe insertion may be found by assessing the variation in the estimated characteristic impedances across the plurality of frequency ranges.
Accordingly, in an embodiment, the variation in the estimated characteristic impedances across the frequency ranges may be found by fitting a function to the estimated characteristic impedance across the plurality of frequency ranges. Preferably the function to be fitted is a polynomial, which will become apparent in the detailed description.
In a further embodiment, when an oblique ear-probe insertion has been detected, the method furthermore comprises a compensation step for compensating for such oblique insertion. That is, in a further step, the oblique probe insertion may be compensated for by utilizing the degree of oblique probe insertion to finding a set of compensation parameters compensating for the oblique probe insertion.
In an embodiment, the method for compensating for an oblique probe insertion, includes the further steps of:
However, to more accurately ensure that all errors arising due to the oblique ear-probe insertion have been compensated for, the method may in an embodiment comprise further steps, wherein the contribution from evanescent modes together with the spreading flow in the obliqueness of the ear-probe insertion is also considered. Thus, in a further step an inertance contribution is calculated and compensated for by:
By applying the above-mentioned steps, it is ensured that all contributions which may arise from the oblique inserted ear probe may be compensated for.
In a further aspect of the disclosure, a diagnostic tool configured to perform the method steps for detecting and compensating for an oblique probe insertion, is provided for. The diagnostic tool may be configured as a hearing screener, diagnostic tool, or similar device, configured to measure an ear-probe response to evaluate the hearing of a test person.
The diagnostic tool comprises in more detail:
That is, the diagnostic tool is configured to be controlled into a mode, wherein the signal generator transmits a stimulus to the receiver, whereby the receiver emits the stimulus into the ear canal via the probe tip of the ear probe. An ear-probe response is measured by the microphone and input into the signal processor of the diagnostic tool. Within the signal processor, a configuration is setup to perform the method of detecting and compensating for a potential obliquely inserted ear probe.
It should be noted that the ear-probe could be constituted by a receiver and a microphone arranged in the ear canal, where a dome-like sealing is abutting the ear canal walls.
In more detail, the signal processor is configured to calculate a degree of oblique probe insertion by assessing the variation in estimated characteristic impedance across a plurality of frequency ranges, and/or further configured to display such variation to a user via a display of the diagnostic tool. This allows the user, for example an audiologist or other hearing-care professional to evaluate if the estimated characteristic impedances can be used in further calculations of hearing related parameters, such as reflectance. In this way, the hearing care professional may be informed about an obliquely inserted ear probe which may distort the further calculations, and therefore requires a new recording or alternatively a compensation, if the results should be expected to be accurate.
Alternatively, this evaluation may also be configured as an automatic process, where the diagnostic tool processes the ear-probe response measured by the microphone and automatically evaluates the degree of obliqueness, and potentially compensates for such obliqueness as described in the following.
In a further embodiment, the diagnostic tool may be configured with a control setup, allowing the user to set the diagnostic tool into one or more modes, wherein a first mode includes; displaying to a user the variation in estimated characteristic impedances across the plurality of frequency ranges; and a second mode wherein a compensation control is presented to the user, allowing the user to set the diagnostic tool into a compensation mode, whereupon the diagnostic tool performs a compensation calculation according to the compensation steps described herein. Accordingly, the diagnostic tool is configured to output a compensated reflectance measure on the display of the diagnostic tool.
The disclosure may be best understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures. The figures are schematic and simplified for clarity, and they just show details to improve the understanding of the claims, while other details are left out. Throughout, the same reference numerals are used for identical or corresponding parts. The individual features of each aspect may each be combined with any or all features of the other aspects. These and other aspects, features, and/or technical effect will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the illustrations described hereinafter in which:
The detailed description set forth below in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of various configurations. The detailed description includes specific details for the purpose of providing a thorough understanding of various concepts. However, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that these concepts may be practiced without these specific details. Several aspects of the apparatus and methods are described by various, functional units, modules, components, steps, processes, algorithms, etc. (collectively referred to as “elements”). Depending upon particular application, design constraints or other reasons, these elements may be implemented using electronic hardware, computer program, or any combination thereof.
In order to provide a full understanding of the methods described herein, first a few comments on acoustic waves and waveguides are elaborated on. As is known, for an acoustic wave that propagates along a lossless uniform waveguide of cross-sectional area A, the ratio of sound P to volume flow U is given by the characteristic impedance of the waveguide
with the air density p and speed of sound c. When an ear probe is inserted into an otherwise uniform waveguide at an oblique angle, measurements are affected by a seemingly horn loading in front of the ear probe. This horn loading causes problems when attempting to estimate acoustic quantities in situ, such as the characteristic impedance using its definition in Eq. (1), as previously described in the summary of the application.
First, to demonstrate the effect on reflectance measurements of an oblique ear probe insertion into a waveguide, such as an ear canal, a set of impedance measurements have been carried out by the inventors in a uniform anechoic steel waveguide of radius a=4 mm. To illustrate the different alignments and mechanical couplings of the ear probe,
The illustrations in
As illustrated, the ear probe 101 is in
The problem with an oblique ear probe insertion can be assessed if looking at the real 11A and imaginary 11B parts of the incident measured impedance Zmeas,0 in an anechoic waveguide. Accordingly, as illustrated in
To evaluate the effect of an oblique ear-probe insertion on, e.g., a reflectance measure given by
where an evanescent-modes inertance {circumflex over (L)}(ωt) and characteristic impedance {circumflex over (Z)}0(ωt) are estimated using only the available data up to a truncation frequency ωt for a plurality of truncation frequencies, as illustrated in
The consideration described above is furthermore confirmed by looking at
Accordingly, the need for determining such an obliqueness of the ear probe insertion and subsequently compensating for such obliqueness is relevant, in order to ensure that the reflectance measures performed in a diagnostic setups of ear canals in hearing screenings is accurate.
Thus, a method for detecting an oblique probe insertion in an acoustic waveguide (such as an ear canal) is suggested in the following. Subsequently, a method for compensating for an obliquely inserted ear probe is suggested. Furthermore, it should be noted that also a device configured to perform these methods are described in the following sections.
Initially, the method of detecting an oblique ear-probe insertion is elaborated on. The method comprises the steps of initially inserting an ear probe 1, 101 into a waveguide 2 or an ear canal 102 as illustrated in
The measurement of the ear probe response is carried out for one frequency range, wherein further the subsequent analysis of the ear probe response is carried out for a plurality of frequency ranges.
For estimating the characteristic impedances for a plurality of frequencies, several methods may be used. One such method includes the time-domain method described by Norgaard et al., (2017) [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 142(6), 3497-3509] and applicants co-pending published application EP3288294, which estimates the evanescent-modes inertance L and the characteristic impedances {circumflex over (Z)}0 by minimizing the real and imaginary parts, respectively, of the impedance estimation error
ϵz=Z−Z0−[Im{Z}]−j−1[Re{Z}], (4)
where [⋅] is the Hilbert-transform operator. In other words, in an embodiment, the characteristic impedance is estimated by utilizing a Hilbert transform of the imaginary and real part of a reflectance or an impedance measure.
It should be noted that other methods for estimating the characteristic impedance can be used, such methods including the methods described by, e.g., Keefe et al., (1992) [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 91(1), 470-485] or Rasetshwane et al., (2011) [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 130(6), 3873-3881].
The inventors discovered that the effect of an oblique ear-probe insertion may be represented as a horn loading in front of the probe. Such horn loading can be represented as a lossless non-uniform two-port model with transmission-line matrix elements a11, a12, a21, and a22. If the plane-wave impedance at the position of the throat (i.e., the ear probe) is known, the plane-wave impedance as the mouth (i.e., the ear canal) may be calculated from
However, it was found to be infeasible to estimate directly these transmission-line matrix elements of the horn loading. The reflectance as the position of the mouth is given by
Combining these equations and rearranging results in
Here, the incident plane-wave throat impedance,
the incident plane-wave horn transfer function,
i.e., the quantities when the horn loading is terminated by the characteristic impedance at the mouth Z0,mouth, and {a11, a22, Z0,mouth}ϵ, and {a12, a21}ϵ, i.e., belonging to the real and imaginary numbers, respectively, this results in
If the impedances are further affected by evanescent modes, represented here as the impedance on a series evanescent-modes inertance jωLem,
Thus, the effect of the horn loading can be compensated for if the incident throat impedance, affected by evanescent modes, is known, resulting only in a small delay in the reflectance phase, since the an arbitrary complex number z divided by its complex conjugate z* simply results in
Of course, this incident throat impedance is unknown for a measured impedance, and the following will describe a procedure to estimate this quantity.
Accordingly, the inventors have in the development of the method realized that the estimated characteristic impedance {circumflex over (Z)}0 in a uniform waveguide using an arbitrary ear-probe insertion represents the cumulative averaged real part of an incident measured impedance up to some truncation frequency ωt,
{circumflex over (Z)}
0(ωt)=<Re{Zmeas,0})>, for 0≤ω≤ωt, (7)
i.e., the impedance that the ear-probe would have measured, were the uniform waveguide terminated by its characteristic impedance. As an example,
{circumflex over (Z)}
0(ωt)={circumflex over (Z)}″0+{circumflex over (Z)}0,mouth, (8)
where {circumflex over (Z)}0,mouth represents an estimate of the characteristic impedance at the entrance of the uniform waveguide.
Since the estimated characteristic impedances with various truncation frequencies {circumflex over (Z)}0(ωt) represent the cumulative average of the incident measured impedance Zmeas,0, the fitted second-order polynomial can be used to estimate the real part of Zmeas,0,
In the specific case of the second-order polynomial, this results in
Re{{circumflex over (Z)}meas,0}=3{circumflex over (Z)}″0ω2+{circumflex over (Z)}0,mouth. (9)
A similar approach can be used to estimate the imaginary part of the incident measured impedance Zmeas,0. In the same way as the estimated characteristic impedance {circumflex over (Z)}0 varies with the truncation frequency ωt for an oblique probe insertion, so does the estimated evanescent-modes inertance which restores causality into the reflectance and impedance, which can be represented in terms of the incident measured impedance estimation error,
{circumflex over (L)}(ωt)=Im{ϵZ
In this way,
represents the combined inertances originating from the oblique probe insertion and evanescent modes when lhorn/λ<<1.
{circumflex over (L)}(ωt)={circumflex over (L)}′ωt+{circumflex over (L)}0, (11)
where {circumflex over (L)}0 now represents an estimate of the combines inertance originating from the oblique probe insertion and evanescent modes when lhorn/λ<<1. The imaginary part of the incident measured impedance can now be estimated as
Im{{circumflex over (Z)}meas,0}=ω{circumflex over (L)}0 (12)
Thus, the inventors have realized that by using a plurality of characteristic impedances and evanescent-modes inertances estimated at a plurality of frequency ranges, it is possible to detect an oblique probe insertion, where in an embodiment, the plurality of frequency ranges is defined from a set of truncation frequencies ωt.
Accordingly, in a method step, the above described assumptions and considerations are used to calculate a set of discrete estimated characteristic impedances for a plurality of truncation frequencies as illustrated as dots in
In a further step, the behavior of the estimated characteristic impedances for each of the frequency ranges are used to characterize the degree of oblique ear probe insertion. Thus, the method utilizes the plurality of estimated characteristic impedances found within a plurality of frequency ranges of the measured probe response to evaluate if the ear probe is inserted in an oblique manner and thus how accurate the subsequent reflectance measures or other diagnostic measures can be said to be. In more detail, each of the characteristic impedances for a plurality of frequency ranges are thus found up to a truncation frequency. In more detail this is done by fitting a polynomial to the set of discrete estimated characteristic impedances as illustrated in
In an embodiment, the variation in reflectance as in
In more detail, the mentioned truncation frequencies are determined from points that allow for differentiability in a Hermitian-symmetric frequency spectrum of said impedance or reflectance measure. That is, in waveguides of finite length, such as an ear canal, the estimation of characteristic impedances depends largely on resampling the synthesized time-domain transfer function by truncating the frequency spectrum, such that differentiability is restored at each truncation frequency ωt. This is the frequency at which the Hermitian-symmetric frequency spectrum is replicated when calculating the Hilbert transform. This means that only a finite number N of truncation frequencies exist,
where l is the total length of the acoustic load, ωm is the maximum measurement frequency, and c is the speed of sound. Thus, the method applies a set of given truncation frequencies defined above, to estimate a plurality of characteristic impedances for each of the plurality of frequency ranges given by a truncation frequency.
When having estimated both the characteristic impedances and the inertances as described above, the two obtained polynomials may be combined to describe the incident measured impedance at the position of the ear-probe
{circumflex over (Z)}
meas,0=3{circumflex over (Z)}″0ω2+{circumflex over (Z)}0,mouth+jω{circumflex over (L)}0 (14)
To summarize the method described herein, reference is made to
Initially referring to
In a first step 201, a measure of an ear-probe response is input to a signal processor, such as a signal processor of a diagnostic tool.
Secondly 202, the signal processor estimates from the measured ear-probe response a set of discrete values for the characteristic impedance for a plurality of frequency ranges, as described in relation to
In a third step 203, a polynomial is fitted to the set of discrete values of the estimated characteristic impedances.
In a fourth step 204, the signal processor may output the fitted polynomial to a display 209 of a diagnostic tool, for a user to manually evaluate the behavior of the polynomial or alternative in a fourth step 204 automatically evaluate the behavior by, e.g., finding the slope of the fitted polynomial and apply the criteria that, if the polynomial has a substantially varying behavior (“yes” path 205), the probe is considered to be inserted oblique 206 into the ear canal. On the contrary, if the slope is not increasing (“no” path 207), the probe is considered to be inserted perpendicularly 208 into the ear canal.
Referring now to
In a further third step 303, as described above, a polynomial is fitted to the set of discrete values of the estimated characteristic impedances, where in a further fourth step 304 the fitted polynomial is approximated to the cumulative average of an incident impedance in the waveguide to estimate the incident measured impedance.
For finding the imaginary contribution, as described previously, a further fifth step 305 includes to input a set of estimated discrete values for the inertance of the measured ear probe response. In a subsequent sixth step 306, a polynomial is fitted to the set of discrete values of the estimated discrete values of inertances.
In the final processing steps 307, 308 the real and imaginary parts estimated by the approximations to fitted polynomials as described herein, is combined to describe the estimate of the incident measured impedance. Thereafter, in a step 308, the estimated incident impedance it output so as to be used in e.g. the reflectance measure.
Accordingly, the reflectance measure unaffected by the oblique probe insertion can now be calculated by
where the asterisk superscripts denotes the complex conjugate. Alternative forms could be utilized, such as
with the main difference being a small difference in the reflectance phase due to the incapability of perfectly compensating for the pure delay through the horn loading representing an oblique ear-probe insertion.
When having performed the steps described herein and summarized in relation to
of the perpendicular and oblique probe insertions are very similar and dramatically improved compared to the case in
In an aspect of the disclosure, a diagnostic tool configured to perform the method steps described herein is disclosed. The diagnostic tool is illustrated schematically in
As further illustrated in
In a further embodiment, the diagnostic tool 3 is configured with a control setup 39, which enables a user to control or take action of the signal processing of measured ear probe response. Accordingly, the diagnostic tool can be set into one or more modes, wherein at least a first mode includes to display a degree of oblique probe insertion in the display 38. The degree of oblique probe insertion is displayed as illustrated in
Furthermore, the diagnostic tool 3, may be set into a compensation mode, whereupon said diagnostic tool performs the method steps according to the previously described compensation method. When set into the compensation mode, the compensation method steps is processed by the signal processor 35, which upon processing outputs a compensated reflectance measure to the display of the diagnostic tool.
Thus, as illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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18185744.2 | Jul 2018 | EP | regional |