The invention relates to a headset, in particular for a hearing device, in order to fit an earpiece or for a hearing device mounting.
Known among hearing devices are hearing tube systems in which sound signals are conducted through a hearing tube into the auditory canal from a housing earpiece of a BTE (behind-the-ear) hearing device. In addition, external hearing systems are known that are placed e.g. directly into the auditory canal.
In all of the systems it is difficult to fit the system to the ear of the user. In addition, as a rule also fitting further functional devices is very complex.
Moreover, headsets for attaching microphones to the head of the user are known. Using them it is possible for the user to provide voice input into the microphone without having to hold the microphone with his hands.
As a rule, such headsets have a curved unit that is placed over the head, similar to headphones, and that, due to its elasticity, clamps the headset to the head. These can be used e.g. by singers during live performances or by deployed forces, e.g. the police, for communication purposes.
However, such headsets are complex, cumbersome, and can have a negative impact on aural reception. Moreover, they negatively affect the visual appearance of the person and also interfere with wearing additional head gear.
Conventional fixation of a functional device using hanging ear units, etc., on the outer ear generally does not ensure stable, slip-resistant attachment with which the functional device can be positioned from the outer ear e.g. as a microphone in the area of the mouth of the user.
DE 102 27 450 B4 depicts a headset for a functional device, in particular a microphone, in which the insert body is inserted into the concha or auditory canal of the user and fixed using a clamping ear unit that is clamped on the concha. A holding device is attached to the insert body and bears the attached functional device, e.g. a rigid wire unit.
Headsets are furthermore used in the field of medicine for applying transformers for cochlear implants. These headsets can have a bending element and an otoplastic to be placed in the ear such as is described e.g. in DE 201 05 562 U1.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,396,935 B1 depicts a headset having a rigid, bendable retention unit, a microphone and speaker being provided at the ends of the retention unit. The retention unit is placed about the outer ear of the user and has in its interior a transmitter/receiver device for mutual communication with e.g. a portable device in a shirt pocket.
An object of the invention is to overcome the drawbacks of the prior art.
Another object of the invention is to create a headset that assures secure positioning of a microphone on the head of the user.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention using a headset for fitting an earpiece, the headset including (a) a lock housing in or on which a fixing device is provided; (b) a flexurally rigid and elastic ear loop forming a loop for accommodating the outer ear of a user; (c) one end of the ear loop being received longitudinally displaceably in the fixing device of the lock housing and the one end being received adjustably in various length positions for adjusting the size of the loop and achieving a fixing effect; (d) a control device for receiving and outputting electrical signals; and (e) a signal interface for receiving and/or outputting electrical signals to and/or from the control device. Further preferred embodiments are described below.
An idea underlying the invention is to attain fastening using a loop that is placed about the outer ear or the auricle, including the earlobe, and the size of which can be securely adjusted using a fixing element.
In accordance with the invention, an ear loop runs from the lock housing rearward and upward further towards the back, is placed over the outer ear and is guided on the front the outer ear through the lock housing in which a fixing element secures or fixes the loop at the desired length. Thus a loop is formed that can be placed about the outer ear.
The lock housing receives the ear loop coming from above at e.g. an acute angle, i.e. less than a right angle, or even at approximately a right angle.
In accordance with one embodiment, the end of the ear loop to be placed as a retention unit behind the outer ear runs forward through the lock housing and bears on its end the functional device to be positioned, i.e. in particular a microphone. In this case the longitudinal position of the lock housing is adjusted relative to the retention unit.
In accordance with another embodiment, the end of the ear loop that is to be placed in front of the outer ear runs rearward through the lock housing as a tensioning element, i.e. in particular as a tensioning unit or tensioning pull, so that
the longitudinal position of the lock housing is adjusted relative to the retention unit.
In accordance with the invention, the earpiece can be a housing earpiece that conducts sound signals directly into the user's auditory canal via an acoustic tube.
Alternatively, the earpiece can also be an external earpiece that is to be positioned in the area of the concha, i.e. in the concha or in the auditory canal, the lock housing, preferably the control device of the lock housing, then being connected to the external earpiece via an electrical line.
The signals can be forwarded via an output line and/or using wireless signals.
The control device can receive, process (e.g. amplify), and forward the signals. However, fundamentally it can also simply pass on signals, i.e. act as a contact; such an embodiment makes sense in particular when a line is connected to an external transmitter and/or receiver, because in this case no power amplification is required.
Moreover, a powerful amplifier can be provided in the microphone, the signal lines being shielded against induction, e.g. as a coaxial cable or twisted pair line. In this case, as well, the control device can merely forward the signals without processing them.
The fixing device can in particular be a clamping element that receives the retention unit e.g. in a through-hole or eyelet.
Moreover, other types of fixing are also possible, e.g. form-fit and/or with a securing element such as e.g. a screw or pin.
The loop has a certain outward internal stress and thus is not constricting. The loop advantageously forms an oval shape with one tip at the lock housing thus accommodates the outer ear in an anatomically favorable manner. The angle at the fixing element is advantageously an acute angle, i.e., smaller than a right angle, in order to attain good tensioning or clamping, or it can even be approximately a right angle. This embodiment is surprisingly self-correcting and self-centering.
According to the invention it is understood that the elastic ear loop, which is flexurally rigid (i.e. at its flex points it has a certain internal stiffness with no slack resilience) and is placed on top over the outer ear and at the front runs downward, has a certain flexural stress that pulls the fixing element or the fixing device forward and upward. Thus the fixing device can be embodied as a simple eyelet that can be displaced in the longitudinal direction as desired by the user with a little force on the retention unit, the eyelet being inclined, without additional fixing means, due to the flexural stress of the ear loop, such that the longitudinal position is secured. During manual adjustment, in general the user can grasp the retention unit in front of the fixing element with one hand and with the other hand can grasp the ear loop above the fixing element and displace it in the longitudinal direction, even weaker persons being able to tolerate the force required for this.
Clamping can be attained simply from a slight difference in the interior diameter of the eyelet and the exterior diameter of the retention unit. The diameters can be largely the same so that displacement is possible due to the elasticity of the outer shell of the retention unit and the tilting described above effects additional securing. Moreover, the control device can represent a slide stop for the clamping element slipping to the rear so that constriction of the outer ear during very careless adjustments is prevented.
In accordance with one preferred embodiment, one or a plurality of individual wires that can be twisted or not twisted run in the retention unit and in the ear loop. Such individual wires having an outer shell surrounding them enable adjustment that holds it shape, has a certain elasticity, and is free of restoring force when the elasticity is overcome. In accordance with the invention the one or a plurality of individual wires of the retention unit and ear loop can be embodied continuous, i.e. they run from the functioning device to the fixing element, and they can run in or adjacent to the signal interface. Thus the retention unit and the ear loop can inventively transition into one another. They can also be embodied in a single piece; such an embodiment is particularly advantageous when combined or integrated with fixing element and signal interface so that a continuous unit can run from the functional device to the signal interface. In the signal interface the signal lines can then be e.g. conducted through to e.g. a line that runs downward.
Uniform stiffness and elasticity of the loop is assured in the continuous embodiment of the one or plurality of individual wires through the retention unit and the ear loop. It has been demonstrated that specifically this embodiment enables slip-resistant fastening that for the user is pleasant, non-interfering, and non-constricting.
The electrical lines that run between the functional device and the signal interface can advantageously be received between the (e.g. twisted) individual wires of the retention unit. This attains in addition a rounder shape for the bundle made of individual wires and electrical lines so that subsequently, by coating with a thin outer shell made of plastic or rubber, a round shape is attained that can be received without significant clearance by an eyelet having a round cross-section.
The inventive headset does not clog the auditory canal; it is hygienically acceptable because it is not affixed in the auricle or outer ear. It can be used for both the left ear and the right ear because it does not have a preferred left or right side.
As an alternative to the embodiment having rigid individual wires, the retention unit and/or the ear loop can also be embodied e.g. as plastic injection-molded parts or the retention unit can be embodied by coating the signal lines.
The invention is described in greater detail in the following using the enclosed drawings of a few embodiments.
In accordance with the various embodiments, a headset 1 has a lock housing 2 to which is attached an ear loop 3 that is made of a rigid, bendable, elastic material and that forms a loop 9. For ease of visualization, the loop 9 in
In
The loop 9 is placed about the outer ear 4 such that the ear loop 3 is situated below the concha and advantageously runs under the earlobe and with the microphone 6 projects forward at its front end. Starting from the control device 2, the ear loop 3 initially extends upward behind the outer ear 4, then runs forward over the outer ear 4, then from there downward to the lock housing 2, so that the ear loop 3 meets the retention unit 5 at a largely right angle at the lock housing 2. By displacing the lock housing 2 relative to the retention unit 5, the user can then adjust a suitable position in which a secure hold is created using the loop 9, and the user can also orient the microphone 6 by bending the retention unit 5 into a suitable position.
In the embodiments a wireless receiver 8 can be provided, on the lock housing and installed in a fixed manner or attachable.
Moreover, an earpiece for transmitting sound waves is provided, a mountable earpiece 10 that receives electrical control signals from a control device 12 and outputs sound waves into the auditory canal 16 of the user via an attached acoustic tube 14 made e.g. of silicone being provided in
The control device 12 can draw the electrical control signals directly from the receiver 8 or can include signals received from the microphone 6.
Moreover, in the embodiment in
Fundamentally, in
No line 18 is provided in the embodiment in
The embodiment in
The size of the loop 9 is adjusted in that the user displaces the lock housing 2 relative to the tensioning unit 20 projecting rearward.
In the embodiments, e.g. Bluetooth signals can be used for wireless signals.
Thus fundamentally any desired data communication from the headset 1 to external devices is possible. In addition to the medical field for hearing aids, it is thus also possible to use the invention for other applications, e.g. voice input and output in the field of entertainment or for telephone services, e.g. call centers, as hands-free devices in motor vehicles, during television broadcasts, etc.
The ear loop 3 can be produced from e.g. wire, i.e. one or a plurality of individual wires, where necessary including a signal line, or from a rigid, elastic plastic or rubber material.
The fixing element can in particular be a clamping element. A clamping force that can be manually overcome can be exerted on the ear loop (3). This can be created e.g. in that the clamping element has an eyelet through which the ear loop 3 runs, creating clamping force. The clamping element can tilt due to the effect of a bending moment with the eyelet exerted by the ear loop 3.
Alternatively, the fixing element can be fixable in a form fit, e.g. using a screw connection.
While this invention has been described as having a preferred design, it is understood that it is capable of further modifications, uses and/or adaptations of the invention following in general the principle of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure as come within the known or customary practice in the art to which to invention pertains and as may be applied to the central features hereinbefore set forth, and fall within the scope of the invention and of the limits of the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 016 052 | Apr 2006 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of application no. PCT/DE2007/000607, filed Apr. 3, 2007, which claims the priority of German patent application no. 10 2006 016 052.5, filed Apr. 4, 2006, and each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4039765 | Tichy et al. | Aug 1977 | A |
6097827 | Yang | Aug 2000 | A |
6396935 | Makkonen | May 2002 | B1 |
20040208335 | Gleissner | Oct 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
32 33 375 | Mar 1984 | DE |
201 05 562 | Aug 2001 | DE |
101 39 865 | Apr 2003 | DE |
10139865 | Apr 2003 | DE |
102 27 450 | Nov 2004 | DE |
10 2005 002 482 | Jun 2006 | DE |
2 036 505 | Jun 1980 | GB |
WO 2006076892 | Jun 1980 | WO |
WO 02054825 | Jul 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090103765 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DE2007/000607 | Apr 2007 | US |
Child | 12285470 | US |