The present invention relates to a hearing aid defined in the preamble of claim 1 and to a method, defined in the preamble of claim 9, for manufacturing a hearing aid.
Hearing aids are exceedingly complex systems. To meet a user's particular needs, a large number of different variations of hardware configurations must be made available. As a result manufacture, marketing and hearing-aid fitting incur very high costs, for instance manufacture requires setting up numerous different hearing-aid configurations which must be appropriately labeled and monitored and marketing requires commensurate stocking, while hearing-aid fitting must match the user's particular needs and different procedures are required depending on the particular hearing-aid configurations.
Starting with a hearing aid of the above cited kind, it is the objective of the present invention to solve this problem. For that purpose, at least some of the peripherals shall comprise an identifying unit of which the output is connected to the input of a comparator. An identification memory is connected to the input of said comparator. At its output, the comparator drives a configuration memory.
Because at least some, preferably all peripherals identify themselves and because the comparator—on the basis of the incoming identifications from the peripherals and following comparison with several possibilities of connecting such peripherals—shall store such a particular hardware configuration, the following significant advantages are attained:
Once assembled, the hearing aid is self-identifying in that by means of the comparator it has ascertained its configuration in terms of peripherals.
Because this self-identification requiring no writing—for instance on the packaging—circumvents sources of errors in production quality controls, in marketing and fitting the hearing aids, it being impossible to test, deliver or fit a hearing aid that would be of another peripheral configuration.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the comparator output is connected to an operationally selective input at the signal processing unit. As a result only such processing is feasible at the signal processing unit—whether for operational purposes per se or already for implementation—which also are admissible for the actual system constellation at hand. Operational programs which for instance must be implemented in wireless manner can be tested in this way for the admissibility of the predominant system constellation.
A further preferred embodiment of the hearing aid of the invention sets up the connection between peripherals and the central signal processor by means of a bus and interfaces. It is clear that in a conventional hearing aid the central digital processing unit must be connected hardware to hardware to the particular peripherals. The more options there are regarding the peripherals, the more connections must be provided for the central processing unit. This number increasingly affects the required chip area of the cited signal processing unit, and this feature is exceedingly disadvantageous in the desired miniaturization of hearing aids. Because the cited connections take place through a bus and interfaces, it is feasible to minimize the number of those hardware connections which are used in the hardware configuration of the state of the art, and the signals applied to said connections can be recognized and interpreted in configuration-specific manner by the signal processing unit. Applicable peripherals include microphones etc, sensors in general, loudspeakers etc., actuators in general, transceivers, i.e. wireless transmitters and/or receivers, manually operated selection switches, loudspeaker volume controls (potentiometers), read-only memories for instance processing parameters for the signal processing unit, read/write memories for instance for processing protocols, etc.
These peripherals can be generically divided into a first category of audio signal components such as sensors, actuators, amplifiers, filters and into a second category of control components such as transceivers, selection switches, memories etc.
Preferably a first bus with first interfaces is used for the first category and a second bus with second interfaces is used for the second category. In a further preferred mode, the first interfaces are designed as at least three-wire interfaces, the second interfaces are designed as at least two-wire interfaces. Appropriate interfaces on one hand are I2S a three-wire interfaces and I2C two-wire interfaces, both marketed by Philips.
In principle however the hookup of signal-processing-unit/bus/peripherals also can be implemented by means of other interfaces, for instance AES-3 interfaces from the Audio Engineering Society and/or SPI Motorola interfaces.
The actual configuration also determines which signals are being transmitted to the central processing unit and hence which parameters. If peripheral identification is automated at the hearing aid of the invention, it will also be possible to automatically activate those signal processing configurations from a plurality of such which do correspond to the prevailing configuration with peripherals, or to drive them externally for instance using a transceiver, that is in wireless manner. As a result the problem of hearing-aid signal processing which does not at all correspond to the present configuration including peripherals shall be eliminated.
In a further preferred embodiment, the hearing aid of the invention comprises an output connected to the configuration memory at the hearing aid. In this way it is feasible—when hooking up the hearing aid to a computer-assisted fitting apparatus—that the hearing aid in its present configuration shall call up said apparatus and identify itself, whereby errors caused by erroneous hearing-aid assumptions shall be excluded. This communication as well may be wireless in that the cited output is provided by a transceiver.
A method of the invention for manufacturing a hearing aid is defined by the features of claim 10. Further preferred implementations of the manufacturing method of the invention are specified in the further claims.
The invention is elucidated below in relation to the attached drawings.
As shown in
As shown in
Each of the minimum of two peripherals 3 comprises an identification memory 5. The information stored in the identification memories 5 is highly specific to the kind of peripheral involved, for instance the kind of microphone, remote control etc.
Following hardware configuration of the hearing aid, an identification cycle begins. Therein, and as schematically indicated by the cycle unit 7, illustratively all identification memories 5 are searched sequentially and an appropriate determination is made that no peripherals are hooked up to the dummy connection 5r. The unit 7 feeds the memory contents of the identification memories 5 to a comparator 9. All peripherals appropriate for the signal processing unit 1 together with their pertinent identifications are entered in a read-only memory 11.
To make sure that the signal processing unit 1 and the read-only memory 11 also correspond to each other in the sense that the memory 11 in fact does contain identification features of peripherals which also match the particular signal processing unit 1, the first step in identification may be in comparing and identification entry stored in an identification memory 51 of the signal processing unit 1 through the cycle unit 7 and the comparator 9 with the contents deposited at the read-only memory 11 in its own identification memory 511 and identifying this memory or contents.
As schematically indicated by the circulating unit 13, a sequential determination takes place at the comparator 9, by means of the entries in the identification memories 5 which of the kinds of peripherals 3 previously stored in the read-only memory 11 are at all present in the hearing-aid under consideration, and which are not. If there is a model X signal processing unit 1, and peripherals of types M and N are called for, then the output of the comparator stores the hearing aid configuration X, M, N in a hearing-aid configuration memory 15, and, as shown in relation to the read-only memory 11, further peripherals of types A, B etc. might be combined with the called-for X model signal processing unit 1.
The output of the configuration memory 15 drives the signal processing unit 1. In the light of the present hardware configuration as shown by the switch 17 in
The output of the configuration memory 15 preferably is connected to an output HGA of the hearing aid. When fitting the hearing aid to the patient, said output is fed to the PC supported fitting unit 19 whereby the hearing aid is identified by its individual configuration at the fitting unit 19. As shown in dashed lines, and in a preferred embodiment, the said output HGA can be implemented by the transceiver (HG′A). Basically a transceiver 30 is needed and most advantageous, even mandatory for binaural signal processing. In such a design the two signal processing units 1 are able to communicate with each other, or, in preferred manner, binaural signal processing may be carried out in a common unit 1.
In a further preferred embodiment shown in
As further shown in
Preferably three-wire interfaces preferably based on the I2S interfaces cited above are used for the former connection.
As regards the latter connection, namely the real control connection, preferably two-wire interfaces are used, in particularly preferably based on the above cited kind of I2C interfaces.
As shown in dashed lines, hybrid peripherals participating in the audio signal processing and being controlled and vice-versa, are each connected to the correspondingly preferred audio signal interfaces or control interfaces, additionally also to the second of the buses provided.
The module of the invention offers a real “plug and play” modular system for hearing aids allowing sharply lowering manufacturing costs, minimizing the connection configuration at the central signal processing unit and in particular substantially precluding erroneous packaging, erroneous configurations, mismatching etc. based on human inattentiveness.
This application is a continuation of prior International Application No. PCT/CH98/00502, which has an international filing date of Nov. 24, 1998.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CH98/00502 | Nov 1998 | US |
Child | 09610284 | US |