A knowledge of the sound pressure level at the eardrum over the audible frequency range is desirable to acoustically fit a hearing instrument to a user's ear. The sound pressure level may be determined by using real ear-to-coupler difference techniques to create an acoustic model of the user's ear canal.
To determine the sound pressure level at the eardrum of an occluded ear, the sound pressure level is measured in the user's ear canal at a predetermined distance from the end of the sound tube of a hearing instrument over the desired range of frequencies and then normalized using the frequency response detected in a test coupler to obtain the measured real-ear-to-coupler difference at the predetermined distance from the end of the sound tube. The sound pressure level is then simulated in a model of the user's ear canal, again over the desired range of frequencies, and once again normalized using a model of a test coupler, yielding a simulated real-ear-to-coupler difference at the predetermined distance from the end of the sound tube. Using an optimization procedure, the dimensions of the ear canal model are adjusted until the differences between the measured and the simulated values are minimized to a predetermined, acceptable amount. The optimized model of the ear canal is then used to obtain the real-ear-to-coupler difference at the eardrum or tympanic membrane. In turn, this parameter may be used to calculate the sound pressure level at the eardrum.
Measuring the Sound Pressure Level
As illustrated in
To minimize the near-field effects of the hearing instrument 40 on the generated sound, the probe microphone 50 is set apart and at a distance l from the end 44 of the hearing instrument sound tube 42 at the tip of the hearing instrument 40. A suitable distance is 5 mm (see U.S. Pat. App'n Pub. No. 2010/0202642, LoPresti et al., “Method to Estimate the Sound Pressure Level at Eardrum Using Measurements Away from the Eardrum”). Sound is then generated over the desired range of frequencies f1-f2 and the sound pressure level vs. frequency is measured using the probe microphone 50 (
Next, the hearing instrument 40 and the probe microphone 50 are inserted into the receptacle 110 of the test coupler 100 in
Determining Measured RECD_l
The measurements in the ear canal 10 and the test coupler 100 are used to determine or calculate measured real-ear-to-coupler difference at the predetermined distance from the end 44 of the sound tube 42 at the tip of the hearing instrument, defined as the measured RECD_l. The real-ear-to-coupler difference, a parameter known to those in the hearing instrument art, is the difference between the results of the two measurements (
Simulating the Ear Canal
Analog models, previously created and available in the literature, are obtained for the hearing instrument 40, the ear canal 10, and the eardrum 30, and are shown in the block schematic diagram of
Simulated RECD_l
Using the model in
Optimizing the Ear Canal Model
To arrive at an optimized model of the ear canal, any suitable optimization technique may be employed to minimize the differences between the measured and simulated real-ear-to-coupler difference at the predetermined distance from the end 44 of the sound tube 42 (simulated RECD_l) (
Simulating RECD at the Eardrum
Using the optimized model (by selecting the optimized values of L and D), the sound pressure level over the frequency range is simulated using the model in
Calculating the Sound Pressure Level at the Eardrum
The simulated RECD_d may now be used to acoustically fit the hearing instrument to the user (
Alternative Models for the Ear Canal
To more closely approximate the geometry of a human ear canal, the ear canal model (segments 210, 220) may have a conical shape (
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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8542841 | LoPresti et al. | Sep 2013 | B2 |
8571224 | Recker et al. | Oct 2013 | B2 |
20070009107 | Lange | Jan 2007 | A1 |
20100202642 | LoPresti | Aug 2010 | A1 |
20110182453 | Van Hal et al. | Jul 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2207366 | Jul 2010 | EP |
2010016925 | Feb 2010 | WO |
Entry |
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Munro Kevin J. et al; “Measuring the Real-Ear to Coupler Difference Transfer Function with an Insert Earphone and a Hearing Instrument: Are They the Same?”; Ear and Hearing; vol. 26; No. 1; pp. 27-34, (2005). |
Chan Joseph C. K. et al; “Estimation of eardrum acoustic pressure and of ear canal length from remote points in the canal”; The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, American Institute of Physics for the Acoustical Society of America, NY; vol. 87; No. 3; pp. 1237-1247 , Mar. 1990. |
Saltykov Oleg et al; “Potential Errors of Real-Ear-to-Coupler-Difference Method Applied for a Prediction of Hearing Aid Performance in an Individual Ear”; 47th International Conference: Music Induced Hearing Disorders; pp. 1-8 , Jun. 2012. |
EP Search Report in Application No. 13196500.6 dated Feb. 17, 2014, 8 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140161267 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |