The present invention is related to a method to activate a hearing device.
Hearing devices are usually activated and run in a normal operating mode after a battery has been inserted into its battery chamber. This procedure is somewhat awkward for the hearing device user because he or she has to insert the device in the ear while it is generating a loud feedback signal.
Therefore, it has been proposed to incorporate a delay circuitry into the hearing device in order to postpone the activation of the normal operating mode. Such a hearing device is disclosed in DE-195 26 175 C1.
While using the known hearing device, the user does not know whether his hearing device functions properly after having inserted a battery.
An objective of the present invention is to eliminate the above-mentioned drawback.
A hearing device is activated by operating the hearing device in an operating mode in a first phase after supplying energy to internal circuitry of the hearing device, by operating the hearing device in a reduced operating mode in a second phase, and by operating the hearing device in a selectable operating mode in a third phase.
Accordingly, several advantages of the present invention are as follows: By the method according to the present invention, comprising the steps of
The correct functioning of the hearing device is thereby indicated by a feedback signal generated by the hearing device in the first phase. The feedback signal is used by the hearing device professional or the hearing device user, respectively, as simple function check: The hearing device is turned on and placed in the open hand. The well audible feedback signal shows that the hearing device is functioning correctly (e.g. the battery is supplying the hearing device with sufficient energy, the signal processor is working, the hearing device is amplifying the input signal, and the microphone and the receiver are not plugged up).
It is expressly pointed out that under the term “hearing device” as used in connection with the disclosure of the present invention the following must be understood:
In other words, the term “hearing device” is not only used in connection with devices to improve the hearing of hearing impaired patients but also, and in addition, with better hearing in general in order to improve communication.
Exemplified embodiments of the present invention will be described in the following referring to drawings, which show;
In
The power detection unit 4, although shown in
According to the present invention, the hearing device will be in the first phase I after the battery is inserted. As it is shown in
The insertion of the hearing device into the ear is not recommended during the first phase I since the feedback signal is usually very loud and would discomfort the hearing device user. Therefore, the second phase II must be awaited during which—as can be seen from FIG. 2—the hearing device is “inactive”, i.e. the processing line is interrupted or at least damped somewhere in-between the microphone 1 and the receiver 3 in order that no feedback loop through the hearing device is formed, whereby the interruption may be implemented by reducing the gain applied in the signal processing unit of the hearing device. In the second phase II which is usually longer than the first phase I, the hearing device can be inserted into the ear, whereby the hearing device user can concentrate himself on the insertion process without being disturbed by a feedback signal. The second phase II is therefore also called “reduced operating mode”, “reduced gain operating mode” or “mute operating mode”.
At the end of the second phase II, the hearing device is ready to be operated in a normal fashion, i.e. in a selectable operating mode, the term “selectable” referring to the possibility of selecting a specific hearing program out of several available hearing programs, whereby in one embodiment, the hearing device user makes the selection and, in another embodiment, the signal processing unit 2 or a similar unit makes the selection automatically. In a still further embodiment of the present invention, the selection of a hearing program is not available.
Having said the above, the present invention opens-up a variety of further embodiments which will be explained in the following:
In a first embodiment of the present invention, the lengths of the first and second phases I and II are set to a preset value, the beginning of the first phase I being defined by the battery insertion. While the first phase I has, for example, a length of 2 to 5 seconds, the second phase II has, for example, a length of 15 to 60 seconds.
In a second embodiment of the present invention, the length of the first phase I is user dependent in that the hearing device user presses a button, e.g. the user input unit 5 (
In a third embodiment of the present invention, no user interaction as described-above is used to terminate the first phase I. Instead, the first phase I is terminated automatically as soon as a feedback signal of, for example, 2 seconds length has been detected. On the assumption that the hearing device user has noticed the normal functioning of the hearing device, the second phase II can begin.
In a fourth embodiment of the present invention, the length of the second phase II is controlled by estimating the feedback transfer function around the hearing device. Therewith, the end of the second phase II is predicted. In this embodiment of the present invention, a change of the feedback transfer function is used in order to determine the point in time at which the hearing device is completely inserted into the ear. The detection of such a state, i.e. the differentiation of an inserted and a not yet inserted hearing device, can be accomplished by noting that the gain of the feedback transfer function is higher if the hearing device is not inserted, compared to the situation were the hearing device is not inserted. Therefore, the assumption can be reached that the hearing device is inserted into the ear and that the second phase II can be terminated. This embodiment allows the reduction of the length of the second phase II and the assimilation of the hearing device to the needs of the hearing device user faster.
In an improved embodiment of the fourth embodiment of the present invention, the estimation of the feedback transfer function can be used to get an indication whether the hearing device is correctly inserted into the ear or whether an adjustment, i.e. a repositioning, must be carried out. In this connection, an announcement can be generated in the signal processing unit 2 and fed into the ear of the hearing device user via the receiver 3 to inform the hearing device user.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the second phase II would include a gain reduction in the hearing device so that no feedback can occur. In other words, a feedback is suppressed by reducing a closed-loop gain through the hearing device below a critical gain level. This critical gain level is the gain at which just no feedback occurs.
In a still further embodiment of the present invention, an artificial beep signal will be generated to indicate that the hearing device is in the second phase II, in addition to one of the above-described methods implemented in the second phase II. Similar beep signals may be used to indicate that the hearing device is in the first phase I or in the third phase III, respectively. The last-mentioned beep signal may also indicate that the hearing device is fully operational and that the hearing device has been successfully configured, for example that the hearing device is now ready to operate in the first hearing program. In this connection, it is also proposed in a still further embodiment of the present invention to generate a beep signal or a number of beep signals which are in direct relationship to the selected hearing program.
It is expressly pointed out that the different embodiments of the present invention, as described above, can be arbitrarily combined in the sense that the different conventions regarding the lengths for the first and the second phases I and II can be used in any combination.
As can be seen from
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the length of the second phase II is reduced to zero, after the device has detected that it has already been inserted into the ear.
In a further embodiment of the present invention, the lengths of the first and second phases I and II are dependent on an internal state of the hearing device. The internal state of the hearing device may, for example, contain information related to answers to one or several of the following questions:
This information can be included in a matrix containing a set of rules which configure the timing of the first phase I and the second phase II.
A possible set of rules may look like this:
For ITE hearing devices, the temperature of an integrated circuit in the hearing device, for example the integrated circuit containing the signal processing unit, may also be taken into account while defining the matrix:
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6330339 | Ishige et al. | Dec 2001 | B1 |
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0207480 | Jan 2002 | WO |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050220315 A1 | Oct 2005 | US |