The present invention relates to an improved hearing aid with wireless signal transmission.
Hearing aids are technical instruments which compensate for congenital or acquired hearing impairments which are not amenable to causal therapy. Hearing aids amplify and modulate the sound, i.e. the acoustic signal, upstream of the ear's actual sense organ, the inner ear. Various types of device are available, comprising a microphone, signal processor (e.g. amplifier), energy source and receiver.
Already known for some time are hearing aids having radio reception units which receive modulated and/or coded audio signals from a transmitter, demodulate and/or decode them and output them suitably processed (mainly amplified) to the hearing aid wearer as sound waves. Such systems are used, for example, in public buildings such as churches, or also in the hearing aid wearer's living area, in order to feed certain types of sound information to the hearing aid not only via sound waves but directly into the hearing system via radio.
Some of these systems use a coding which, in the event of transmission errors, produce unpleasant sounding noises, so-called artifacts, e.g. loud bleeping or clicking noises, before sufficient information for correct decoding is available to the decoder again after the transmission error. A frequent cause of transmission errors is an excessively weak signal reaching the receiver, e.g. because the hearing aid wearer has moved too far away from the transmitter.
The object of the present invention is to specify a hearing aid with wireless signal transmission, enabling unpleasant artifacts resulting from transmission errors due to increasing distance from a transmitter to be avoided.
This object is achieved by a hearing aid with a radio reception unit for wireless reception of modulated and/or coded audio signals, comprising the following:
Means can also be provided for reducing a level of the demodulated and/or decoded audio signal when the estimated reception quality of the received audio signals decreases.
An acoustic noise signal or an acoustic hum signal or any other unpleasant sounding signal can be used as the limit signal. The limit signal may also be an optical signal.
In an exemplary embodiment, the means of generating the limit signal can include the following:
Additionally or alternatively, the following can be provided for generating a limit signal:
The invention also relates to a corresponding method for controlling the signal processing of a hearing aid.
An advantage of the present invention is to be seen in that decreasing reception quality is communicated to the hearing aid wearer in an intuitive manner by amplifying the limit signal with increasing deterioration of reception quality and simultaneously or alternatively fading the wanted signal, i.e. the demodulated and/or decoded audio signal, into the background.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention will now be explained in greater detail.
In the case of the hearing aids with radio reception units mentioned in the introduction, the reception quality of the signal depends, among other things, on the spatial distance of the hearing aid (and therefore of the hearing aid wearer) from the transmitter. When a critical distance is exceeded, reception quality is so poor that correct recovery of the (wanted) audio signal from the received modulated and/or coded signal is no longer possible. Depending on the relevant spatial conditions, e.g. walls and their constitution, a spatial bubble is thus defined within which interference-free reception is possible and outside of which this cannot be guaranteed.
In a hearing aid according to the invention, the reception quality of modulated and/or coded audio signals received is continuously monitored (e.g. periodically every 100 ms), the reception quality being derivable e.g. from the channel coding. The signal quality can be numerically evaluated, e.g. in the interval 0.1, where 0 indicates a no longer usable signal and 1 a best possible signal.
In a first embodiment of the invention, a synthetic acoustic signal, hereinafter referred to as a limit signal, is generated and heterodyned with the demodulated and/or decoded wanted) audio signal, the level of the limit signal being dependent on the signal quality, namely such that the level of the limit signal increases with declining reception quality, so that outside said spatial bubble the limit signal is injected with maximum level. It is therefore signaled to the hearing aid wearer by means of the limit signal that he is moving out of the reception area of a particular transmitter, whereupon the hearing aid wearer can, for example, deactivate the hearing aid's radio reception or return in the direction of better reception.
In addition, with declining reception quality the level of the demodulated and/or decoded (wanted) audio signal can be reduced in order to prevent unpleasant noise artifacts from being output to the hearing aid wearer if the latter does not deactivate the hearing aid's radio reception on leaving the spatial bubble.
Particularly suitable as a limit signal are signals which do not constitute a distinct tone, i.e. noise signals or hum signals, for example.
In other embodiments of the invention, the limit signal and/or the wanted audio signal are convolved with suitable impulse responses in order to produce an acoustic spatial impression which corresponds to the movement out of the reception area.
For this purpose the limit signal can be convolved with a synthetic room impulse response so that the limit signal seems louder and more direct (i.e. spatially nearer), the closer the receiver is to a limit of the spatial bubble, i.e. the poorer the estimated reception quality. The hearing aid wearer is therefore given the impression of approaching an acoustic barrier, the aim again being that, for example, he deactivate the hearing aid's radio reception or move again in the direction of better reception. Methods for generating suitable room impulse responses will be familiar to the average person skilled in the art of digital audio signal processing.
Similarly, the wanted signal can alternatively or additionally be convolved with an impulse response which causes the wanted signal to appear quieter and more indirect (also spatially more distant) the closer the receiver is to a limit of the spatial bubble, i.e. the poorer the estimated reception quality. The hearing aid wearer is therefore given the (correct) impression of going away from the signal source, an impression which he would not get from modem coding methods, as the latter, thanks to error correction mechanisms, generally operate without audible deterioration up to a certain distance from the transmitter, but cease relatively abruptly to provide usable results beyond that limit.
Numerous variants and embodiments of the invention described are conceivable. For example, the hearing aid can be configured such that the impressing of the limit signal and/or the reducing of the wanted signal level only take effect when the reception quality has deteriorated to a certain degree, e.g. in order to prevent the hearing aid wearer from experiencing a fluctuating signal in the event of comparatively small movements in the interference-free or minimally disturbed reception region.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 012 993.3 | Mar 2008 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 12/380,944. This application claims priority of Getman application No. 10 2008 012 993.3 DE filed Mar. 7, 2008, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12380944 | Mar 2009 | US |
Child | 13358876 | US |