1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an acoustic noise canceling microphone enclosure.
2. Description of the Related Art
Mobile phones are used in all types of noisy real world environments as well as outside in the wind. New digital phone systems are now incorporating Automatic Speech recognition (ASR) software to provide a caller with an “automated attendant” to help navigate thorough phone list directories and obtain customer service through voice commands. In the past the phone user would have to use the touch pad to dial tone-pulse signals to navigate through complicated directory “trees”. Voice commands are both more convenient and a safety feature because the user does not have to look at the keypad and manually dial numbers to aces the desired information. When using a cell phone while driving, the user wants to keep his eyes on the road and hands on the wheel for safety. Therefore speech dialing is a preferred way to operate a cell network's directory assistance and other new information services.
ASR voice command software (automated attendants) are susceptible to noise. Noisy speech signals will result in false voice commands or no recognition by the automated attendant system. Thus, real world noisy environments result in poor performance of ASR software which creates customer dissatisfaction with the carrier's service. Most cell phones do not have noise cancellation technologies to enhance these fragile but powerful ASR automated attendant software services.
Conventionally, wireless headsets with a boom feature can contain a close talking pressure gradient microphone element in a large housing. The housing typically has a main acoustic opening on the front and smaller opening directly out the back of the microphone element.
Traditionally, a foam wind cover to is used to block the unwanted wind pressure on to the internal diaphragm of the microphone element. Wind pressure will result in drastically moving the microphone pick up diaphragm and translate into predominantly low frequency noise on the voice signal. It is desirable to reduce the wind noise as well as acoustic noise. The foam device typically has to be very large to cover the entire microphone tip assembly. On more complex two-microphone Bluetooth headsets that use digital signal processing (DSP) technology, a high-pass filter is used upon detection of wind turbulence. Therefore using such a DSP solution consumes battery power and distorts the voice quality.
Therefore, how the microphone element is acoustically housed and placed in relation to the mouth can greatly effect the noise canceling performance of the pressure-gradient microphone device and its ability to pick up the voice signal adequately and provide a desirable signal to noise ratio.
Thus, there is a market need for a cell phone accessory with noise canceling technology for use in noisy mobile environments. Preferably, such an accessory can be a Bluetooth headset that could be used with any number of different manufacturers cellular handsets. Successive generations of Bluetooth headsets are growing increasingly small so the present invention would also have to be sized accordingly as not to look to obtrusive on the headset device.
The object of the present invention is to provide a miniature acoustic noise canceling microphone enclosure. It is also an object of the present invention to reduce wind noise and help limit the total amount of noise received by the microphone in the outside mobile environment.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a cell phone headset accessory that is fashionable and unobtrusive to the wearer, while the user is going about his every day life.
Embodiments of the present invention provide maximum voice transmission, noise reduction, and wind suppression, while also being fashionable, compact and out of the way from in front of the user's mouth.
The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Hereinafter, preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. It should be noted that the similar components are designated by similar reference numerals although they are illustrated in different drawings. Also, in the following description, a detailed description of known functions and configurations incorporated herein will be omitted when it may obscure the subject matter of the present invention.
The present invention proposes a microphone headset having a acoustic noise canceling microphone enclosure. A conventional boom headset worn on a user head 2 is shown in
The present invention proposes microphone enclosure in a headset-boom configuration that is smaller in size compared to prior art devices.
According to one embodiment, the microphone enclosure is a cylindrical capsule approximately 10 mm long by 6 mm in diameter (at its widest) other shapes, dimensions? The enclosure 100 has at least two sound ports: a front sound port 60 and a side sound port 50. According to an embodiment, the front sound port 60 is centered on a flat-end 130 of the microphone enclosure 100. However, in other embodiments, the enclosure does not necessarily have a flat-end 130, or that the front sound port 60 necessarily is centered. In other embodiments, there may be more than one sound hole or aperture on the front end of the enclosure 100. The side sound port 50, in some embodiments, resides closer to the boom 10, than the flat-end 130 or a tip of the enclosure. The side sound port is an angle with the front sound port 60 that in some embodiments ranges from about 90° perpendicular to about 135° with respect to the direction that the front sound port 60 faces. This angle may vary to improve acoustic performance. For instance, the angle between the side sound port 50 and the front sound port 60 can be about 90°, about 95° . . . (by 5° increments up to 135°). In theory the angle could be between 0° and 180°. Similarly, in other embodiments there may be more than one side sound port. The at least two sound ports help focus or direct the sensitivity of the microphone.
According to embodiments of the invention, the two sound holes, are very small so minimal wind exposure is present. It is also more difficult for wind pressure to enter a small hole than the desired acoustic vibrations. Therefore the holes can be minimal so less wind pressure can impinge on the air pressure buffer zones. The buffer zones were found to work so well acoustically, as well as for wind suppression that only a very small amount of wind foam was required to optimize performance. The size of the holes can range from 1 mm to 3 mm.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the acoustic or sound ports 50 and 60 of the microphone enclosure 100 direct the microphone acoustic sensitivity.
Based on the microphone enclosure 100 according to an embodiment of the present invention, a polar plot as shown in
The setup used a Dell Notebook computer as the source of the 1411 kbps high quality speech files that were played from the PC 245 through a B&K artificial head and torso simulator 210. Noise files, when needed, are played from the PC 245 through an amplifier then through an amplified off axis speaker. To ensure repeatable results the speech and noise files are combined into a single stereo file that is played left channel to the head and torso simulator and right channel to the off axis speaker. The Device Under Test (DUT) is connected to a second computer 240 that is configured for speech recognition. The Dragon Naturally Speaking Version 9 software application is used on the computer 240 paired with the Bluetooth devices 200 to record the transcribed text reading. The input for all tests is via an Andrea Bluetooth USB Audio Adapter 250 with a full duplex audio input and output.
A source of variability in testing is sound pressure level measurements. There are two main “weightings” for Sound Pressure Level (SPL): “A” weighting and “C” weighting. “A” weighting compensates for the non-linear response of the human ear, while “C” weighting is a flatter response. The response of the human ear to sound is worse at low and high frequencies. The two weightings will give different results depending on the frequency distribution of the sound. In an office environment, significant content can be missed by “A” weighting that humans cannot hear, but the microphone will pick-up. The microphone and speech engine will be affected by this inaudible noise so it was considered in the test. Low frequency blower and air exchanger noise is of particular concern, as it is difficult to hear. All Andrea SPL readings use “C” weightings. It is believed that “C” weighting reflects more accurately the range of sounds the microphone picks up. Andrea PureAudio BT-200 Noise Canceling Bluetooth Headset results indicated a 31 dB of signal to noise ratio for suppression of background “Crowd Noise” imposed into the microphone while speech remains clear and undistorted. The results are shown in
The miniature capsule with unique acoustic porting for noise canceling boom microphone according to embodiments of the present invention provides superior performance (providing 20 dB noise reduction @200 Hz). The microphone according to an embodiment of the present invention provides better acoustic noise than with other digital processing techniques that utilize software algorithms to reduce these problems. Compared to standard Bluetooth headsets with no wind cancellation, the microphone enclosure according to an embodiment of the present invention provides 11.5 dB of wind noise reduction. Without the foam, the device would have 0 dB of wind noise reduction. Therefore the improved invention version has 11.5 dB of wind noise reduction. Other advantages include no voice frequency distortion as found with most digital NR software algorithms. Other advantages of the present invention include the power consumption, as the noise and wind reduction of the enclosure 100 of the present invention requires no DSP or other electronic circuitry. Therefore, the battery life of the headset can be dedicated to the transmitter unit and thus provide much longer talk times between charges than with digital processing devices with same battery size/type (8˜10 Hrs talk time, 150 Hrs standby). Furthermore the input device can be relatively light and small while not interfering with eating and drinking while wearing and in use.
While illustrative embodiments of the invention have been described above, it is, of course, understood that various modifications will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Such modifications are within the spirit and scope of the invention, which is limited and defined only by the appended claims.