The present invention relates to a hearing aid with means for suppression of perceived occlusion.
The occlusion effect denotes the low frequency enhancement in the loudness level of bone conducted signals due to occlusion of the ear canal. Some users having an earmold or a hearing aid in the ear canal blocking the canal complain that they have a perception of being in a barrel. In particular, their own voice sounds as if they speak in a barrel.
Sounds produced in a person's throat are transmitted to the person's ear canal by bone conduction. The elastic cartilaginous tissue in the ear canal transforms the bone conducted energy to acoustic waves in the ear canal. Speech transmitted to the ear canal in this way is denoted bone conducted speech.
It is known to suppress the occlusion effect by inserting the hearing aid earmold or housing deeply in the ear canal, i.e. in the bony part of the ear canal. This reduces the occlusion effect since the sealed volume of the ear canal is isolated from the cartilaginous tissue transforming bone conducted speech to acoustic waves. However, the bony part of the ear canal is typically very sensitive and positioning of a mechanical member in this part of the ear canal may be uncomfortable to the user.
It is also well known to provide a vent in the earmold or hearing aid housing allowing bone conducted sound to escape from the ear canal. The vent is typically a tube extending through the earmold or hearing aid housing facilitating transmission of acoustic waves from one side to the other so that the ear canal is not completely blocked. However, the vent may cause acoustic feedback. Acoustic feedback occurs when the microphone of a hearing aid receives the acoustic output signal generated by the receiver. Amplification of the received signal may lead to generation of a stronger acoustic output signal and eventually the hearing aid may oscillate. In hearing aids residing completely in the canal (CIC hearing aids), the short distance between microphone and receiver leads to low attenuation of acoustic waves transmitted from the receiver to the microphone. The attenuation increases with decreasing vent diameter and increasing vent length. Thus, occlusion and feedback impose opposite requirements on vent geometry.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a hearing aid with signal processing means for suppression of the occlusion effect.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a fitting method leading to a suppression of a hearing aid user's perception of the occlusion effect.
Research by the present inventors has shown that in some listening situations, hearing aid users perceive an improvement in sound quality when low frequency bands are enhanced, i.e. the above-mentioned “barrel perception” becomes less noticeable. However, in some other listening situations, e.g. during conversation, the hearing aid user perceives an improvement in sound quality when low frequency bands are attenuated, probably because of amplification of bone conducted speech.
The present invention exploits the fact that the eardrum of a user receives the user's own speech from two different propagation paths. In addition to the bone conducted speech mentioned above, sound waves also propagate through air from the mouth and around the head to the ear where it is received by the hearing aid. Also for air conducted speech, low frequencies are enhanced since the head attenuates high frequencies leaving low frequencies unaffected.
This is further illustrated in
According to the present invention, a hearing aid is provided wherein a user's own speech is attenuated at low frequencies whereby the sum of air conducted and bone conducted speech is also attenuated. A suppression of the occlusion effect during conversation is hereby obtained since the sum of bone and air conducted speech has been reduced to a level that is closer to the sum level in a non-occluded ear canal. The user's own speech is discriminated from another person's speech by the signal level at low frequencies.
Further, in listening situations, low signal frequencies are enhanced whereby suppression of the occlusion effect in listening situations is obtained.
Thus, according to the present invention, a fitting method is provided for a multichannel hearing aid with at least one low frequency channel having an individually adjustable compressor. The method comprises the first step of adjusting the characteristic of the compressor according to the hearing loss to be compensated by the hearing aid. The method is characterized by the succeeding step of increasing the compression ratio of the characteristic of the compressor in the at least one low frequency band.
A multichannel hearing aid comprises at least one input transducer for transforming an acoustic input signal into a first electrical signal, a first filter bank with bandpass filters for dividing the first electrical signal into a set of bandpass filtered first electrical signals, a processor for generation of a second electrical signal by individual processing of each of the bandpass filtered first electrical signals, e.g. for amplification with different gains, and adding the processed electrical signals into the second electrical signal, an output transducer for transforming the second electrical signal into an acoustic output signal, and wherein the processor comprises a set of compressors each of which is connected to a different bandpass filter for compression of the corresponding bandpass filtered signal. The frequency ranges of the bandpass filters are also denoted channels.
It is presently preferred that the compression ratio is increased to at least 1.4, and more preferred to increase the compression ratio to approximately 2.
The at least one low frequency channel may further comprise an offset amplifier adding an offset gain to the compressor characteristic, and the method may further comprise the step of adjusting the offset gain in the range from −20 dB to 20 dB.
Accordingly, a hearing aid that has been fitted with the fitting method according to the present invention is provided with a compressor in a low frequency channel that compresses signals with a larger compression ratio than would have been set according to known fitting methods.
It is a characteristic feature of a compressor characteristic having been adjusted in accordance with the fitting method according to the present invention that the compression ratio, e.g. a compression ratio equal to 2, is maintained for a large range of the signal level at the input of the compressor. It is preferred that the signal level range starts at 30 dB SPL, more preferred at 25 dB SPL, still more preferred at 20 dB SPL, and even more preferred below 20 dB SPL. Preferably the range ends at 60 dB SPL, preferably at 70 dB SPL, more preferred at 80 dB SPL, and even more preferred above 80 dB SPL. The range may vary from one frequency band to another.
In accordance with the present invention, it has been recognized that the perception of the occlusion effect is caused by signals at low frequencies, such as frequencies below 1600 Hz, more pronounced below 1000 Hz, even more pronounced below 800 Hz, still more pronounced below 500 Hz. Thus, according to the present invention, a low frequency band comprises frequencies below 1600 Hz, preferably below 1000 Hz, more preferred below 800 Hz, and most preferred below 500 Hz.
Still other objects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description wherein the invention will be explained in greater detail. By way of example, there is shown and described a preferred embodiment of this invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modification in various, obvious aspects all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and descriptions will be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive. In the drawings:
In
As mentioned above, in a low frequency range, the hearing loss is typically moderate so that a known fitting method leads to a compressor characteristic with a low compression ratio, i.e. a compression ratio close to 1. This leads to a low attenuation of high level signals whereby the above-mentioned perceived occlusion effect occurs. It is an important advantage of the present invention that a further step is added to a known fitting method that leads to an increase of the compression ratio, e.g. to a compression ratio that is greater than 1.4, e.g. equal to 2, whereby low frequency, high level signals are attenuated, alleviating the perceived occlusion effect.
Further, offset amplifiers are provided for adjusting the compressor characteristic in each of the low frequency channels subjected to compressions for reduction of the perception of occlusion of the ear canal.
It should be noted from
In the hearing aid 20, a microphone 22 is provided for reception of a sound signal and conversion of the sound signal into an electrical signal representing the received sound signal. The hearing aid 20 may comprise a plurality of input transducers 22, e.g. whereby a desired directional sensitivity characteristics may be provided. The microphone 22 converts the sound signal to an analogue signal. The analogue signal is sampled and digitized by an A/D converter 24 into a digital signal 26 for digital signal processing in the hearing aid 20. The digital signal 26 is fed to a digital signal processor 28 for amplification of the microphone output signal 26 according to a desired frequency characteristic and compressor function to provide an output signal 30 suitable for compensating the hearing deficiency of the user. The output signal 30 is fed to a D/A converter 32 and further to an output transducer 34, i.e. a receiver 34, that converts the output signal 30 to an acoustic output signal.
The signal processor 28 comprises a first filter bank 36 with bandpass filters 36i for dividing the electrical signal 26 into a set of bandpass filtered first electrical signals 261, 262, . . . , 26i. Further, the signal processor 28 comprises a set 38 of compressors and offset amplifiers 381, 382, . . . , 38i each of which is connected to a respective bandpass filter 361, 362, . . . , 36i for individual compression of the corresponding bandpass filtered signals 261, 262, . . . , 26i, the compressor and offset amplifiers 38, and 382 in the low frequency bands 36, and 362 having compression ratios that have been increased in accordance with the present invention.
The illustrated compressor characteristics 381 and 382 correspond to the characteristic shown in
In another embodiment of the invention, the set of compressors comprises four compressors with a compressor characteristic of the type shown in
During fitting and/or fine tuning, compressors in neighboring bands may be grouped together for simultaneous adjustment of respective parameters. For simplicity, it is preferred that corresponding parameters of compressors in a specific group are adjusted to the same value.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2001 00607 | Apr 2001 | DK | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4852175 | Kates | Jul 1989 | A |
5500902 | Stockham, Jr. et al. | Mar 1996 | A |
6240192 | Brennan et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
6873709 | Hou | Mar 2005 | B1 |
20020118851 | Paludan-Mueller | Aug 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO 9847313 | Oct 1998 | WO |
WO 9856210 | Dec 1998 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20020150269 A1 | Oct 2002 | US |