Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to hearing prostheses.
Related Art
Hearing loss, which may be due to many different causes, is generally of two types, conductive and/or sensorineural. Conductive hearing loss occurs when the normal mechanical pathways of the outer and/or middle ear are impeded, for example, by damage to the ossicular chain or ear canal. Sensorineural hearing loss occurs when there is damage to the inner ear, or to the nerve pathways from the inner ear to the brain.
Individuals who suffer from conductive hearing loss typically have some form of residual hearing because the hair cells in the cochlea are undamaged. As such, individuals suffering from conductive hearing loss typically receive an auditory prosthesis that generates motion of the cochlea fluid. Such auditory prostheses include, for example, acoustic hearing aids, bone conduction devices, and direct acoustic stimulators.
In many people who are profoundly deaf, however, the reason for their deafness is sensorineural hearing loss. Those suffering from some forms of sensorineural hearing loss are unable to derive suitable benefit from auditory prostheses that generate mechanical motion of the cochlea fluid. Such individuals can benefit from implantable auditory prostheses that stimulate nerve cells of the recipient's auditory system in other ways (e.g., electrical, optical and the like). Cochlear implants are often proposed when the sensorineural hearing loss is due to the absence or destruction of the cochlea hair cells, which transduce acoustic signals into nerve impulses. An auditory brainstem stimulator is another type of stimulating auditory prosthesis that might also be proposed when a recipient experiences sensorineural hearing loss due to damage to the auditory nerve.
Certain individuals suffer from only partial sensorineural hearing loss and, as such, retain at least some residual hearing. These individuals may be candidates for electro-acoustic hearing prostheses that deliver both electrical and acoustical stimulation.
In one aspect, a hearing prosthesis is provided. The hearing prosthesis comprises: at least one sound processing path that converts a sound signal into one or more output signals for use in compensation of a hearing loss of a recipient of the hearing prosthesis; and a tinnitus relief system configured to inject a channelized tinnitus masker signal into the sound processing path such that the channelized tinnitus masker forms part of the one or more output signals.
In another aspect, a method performed at an electric output hearing prosthesis is provided. The method comprises: band-pass filtering a sound signal to generate a plurality of band-pass filtered signals; combining separate tinnitus relief signal components with each of a respective one of the plurality of band-pass filtered signals; and generating one or more output signals for use in energizing one or more electrodes of the electric output hearing prosthesis.
In another aspect, a sound processing unit is provided. The sound processor comprises: a plurality of band-pass filters configured to convert a sound signal into a plurality of channelized signals; and an output block configured to convert the plurality of channelized signals into a plurality of output signals, wherein a channelized tinnitus masker signal is applied to the channelized signals prior to conversion into the plurality of output signals.
Embodiments of the present invention are described herein in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Tinnitus is the perception of noise or “ringing” in the ears which currently affects an estimated 30 million people in the United States alone. Tinnitus is a common artefact of hearing loss, but may also be a symptom of other underlying conditions, such as ear injuries, circulatory system disorders, etc. Although tinnitus affects can range from mild to severe, almost one-quarter of those with tinnitus describe their tinnitus as disabling or nearly disabling.
Presented herein are techniques for providing tinnitus relief to recipients of a hearing prosthesis. In accordance with embodiments presented herein, a hearing prosthesis comprises a tinnitus relief system that is configured to generate a tinnitus masker signal that comprises a plurality of discrete (separate) components. The tinnitus relief system is configured to inject the components of the tinnitus masker signal directly into a sound processing path so that the masker components are combined with different processed portions of a channelized sound signal. The channelized sound signal and the components of the tinnitus masker signal are used to generate one or more output signals for use in compensation of a hearing loss of a recipient of the hearing prosthesis.
For ease of illustration, embodiments are primarily described herein with reference to one specific type of electric output auditory/hearing prosthesis, namely a cochlear implant. However, it is to be appreciated that the techniques presented herein may be used with other types of hearing prostheses, such as auditory brainstem stimulators, direct acoustic stimulators, bone conduction devices, electro-acoustic hearing prostheses, etc.
The external component 102 is directly or indirectly attached to the body of the recipient and comprises a sound processing unit 110, an external coil 106 and, generally, a magnet (not shown in
As shown in
Elongate stimulating assembly 126 is configured to be at least partially implanted in the recipient's cochlea 120 (
Stimulating assembly 126 extends through an opening 121 in the cochlea (e.g., cochleostomy, the round window, etc.) and has a proximal end connected to stimulator unit 132 via lead region 124 and a hermetic feedthrough (not shown in
Returning to external component 102, the sound input element(s) 108 are configured to detect/receive sound signals and to generate electrical signals therefrom. These signals, referred to herein as electrical input signals, are representative of the detected sound signals. The sound processor 112 is configured to execute sound processing and coding to convert the input signals generated by the sound input element(s) 108 into output data signals that represent electrical stimulation signals for delivery to the recipient.
The output data signals generated by the sound processor 112 are transcutaneously transferred to the cochlear implant 104 via external coil 106. More specifically, the magnets fixed relative to the external coil 106 and the implantable coil 136 facilitate the operational alignment of the external coil 106 with the implantable coil 136. This operational alignment of the coils enables the external coil 106 to transmit the coded data signals, as well as power signals received from power source 116, to the implantable coil 136. In certain examples, external coil 106 transmits the signals to implantable coil 136 via a radio frequency (RF) link. However, various other types of energy transfer, such as infrared (IR), electromagnetic, capacitive and inductive transfer, may be used to transfer the power and/or data from an external component to a cochlear implant and, as such,
In general, the coded data signals received at implantable coil 136 are provided to the transceiver 130 and forwarded to the stimulator unit 132. The stimulator unit 132 is configured to utilize the coded data signals to generate stimulation signals (e.g., current signals) for delivery to the recipient's cochlea via one or of the electrodes 138. In this way, cochlear implant 100 stimulates the recipient's auditory nerve cells in a manner that causes the recipient to perceive the received sound signals by bypassing absent or defective hair cells that normally transduce acoustic vibrations into neural activity.
As noted, the sound processing unit 110 also includes a tinnitus relief system 118 (
Cochlear implant 200 includes an implant body 222, lead region 124, and elongate intra-cochlear stimulating assembly 126. Similar to the example of
Cochlear implant 200 includes sound input elements in the form of implantable microphones 208 that, possibly in combination with one or more external microphones (not shown in
The transceiver 130 permits cochlear implant 200 to receive signals from, and/or transmit signals to, an external device 202. The external device 202 can be used to, for example, charge the battery 234. In such examples, the external device 202 may be a dedicated charger or a conventional cochlear implant sound processor. Alternatively, the external device 202 can include one or more microphones or sound input elements configured to generate data for use by the sound processor 112. External device 202 and cochlear implant 200 may be collectively referred to as forming a cochlear implant system.
The examples of
As shown, multiple sound input elements 308, such as one or more microphones 309 and one or more auxiliary inputs 311 (e.g., audio input ports, cable ports, telecoils, a wireless transceiver, etc.) receive/detect sound signals which are then provided to the pre-filterbank processing module 342. If not already in an electrical form, sound input elements 308 convert the sound signals into an electrical form for use by the pre-filterbank processing module 342. The arrows 341 present the electrical input signals provided to the pre-filterbank processing module 342.
The pre-filterbank processing module 342 is configured to, as needed, combine the electrical input signals received from the sound input elements 308 and prepare those signals for subsequent processing. The pre-filterbank processing module 342 then generates a pre-filtered input signal 343 that is provided to the filterbank 344. The pre-filtered input signal 343 represents the collective sound signals received at the sound input elements 308 at a given point in time.
The filterbank 344 uses the pre-filtered input signal 343 to generate a suitable set of bandwidth limited channels, or frequency bins, that each includes a spectral component of the received sound signals that are to be utilized for subsequent sound processing. That is, the filterbank 344 is a plurality of band-pass filters that separates the pre-filtered input signal 343 into multiple components, each one carrying a single frequency sub-band of the original signal (i.e., frequency components of the received sounds signal as included in pre-filtered input signal 343).
The channels created by the filterbank 344 are sometimes referred to herein as sound processing channels, and the sound signal components within each of the sound processing channels are sometimes referred to herein in as band-pass filtered signals or channelized signals. As described further below, the band-pass filtered or channelized signals created by the filterbank 344 may be adjusted/modified as they pass through the sound processing path 351. As such, the band-pass filtered or channelized signals are referred to differently at different stages of the sound processing path 351. However, it will be appreciated that reference herein to a band-pass filtered signal or a channelized signal may refer to the spectral component of the received sound signals at any point within the sound processing path 351 (e.g., pre-processed, processed, selected, etc.).
At the output of the filterbank 344, the channelized signals are initially referred to herein as pre-processed signals 345. The number ‘m’ of channels and pre-processed signals 345 generated by the filterbank 344 may depend on a number of different factors including, but not limited to, implant design, number of active electrodes, coding strategy, and/or recipient preference(s). In certain arrangements, twenty-two (22) channelized signals are created and the sound processor 312 is said to include 22 channels.
In general, the electrical input signals 341 and the pre-filtered input signal 343 are time domain signals (i.e., processing at pre-filterbank processing module 342 occurs in the time domain). However, the filterbank 344 operates to deviate from the time domain and, instead, create a “channel” or “channelized” domain in which further sound processing operations are performed. As used herein, the channel domain refers to a signal domain formed by a plurality of amplitudes at various frequency sub-bands. In certain embodiments, the filterbank 344 passes through the amplitude information, but not the phase information, for each of the ‘m’ channels. This is often due to one or more of the methods of envelope estimation that might be used in each channel, such as half wave rectification (HWR) or low pass filtering (LPF), Quadrature or Hilbert envelope estimation methods among other techniques. As such, the channelized or band-pass filtered signals are sometimes referred to herein as “phase-free” signals. In other embodiments, both the phase and amplitude information may be retained for subsequent processing.
In embodiments in which the band-pass filtering operations eliminate the phase information (i.e., generate phase-free signals), the channel domain may be viewed as distinguishable from the frequency domain because signals within the channel domain cannot be exactly/precisely converted back to the time domain. That is, due to the removal of the phase information in certain embodiments, the phase-free channelized signals in the channel domain are not exactly convertible back to the time domain.
The sound processor 312 also includes a post-filterbank processing module 346. The post-filterbank processing module 346 is configured to perform a number of sound processing operations on the pre-processed signals 345. These sound processing operations include, for example gain adjustments (e.g., multichannel gain control), noise reduction operations, signal enhancement operations (e.g., speech enhancement), etc., in one or more of the channels. As used herein, noise reduction is refers to processing operations that identify the “noise” (i.e., the “unwanted”) components of a signal, and then subsequently reduce the presence of these noise components. Signal enhancement refers to processing operations that identify the “target” signals (e.g., speech, music, etc.) and then subsequently increase the presence of these target signal components. Speech enhancement is a particular type of signal enhancement. After performing the sound processing operations, the post-filterbank processing module 346 outputs a plurality of processed channelized signals 347.
As shown in
As noted, the tinnitus relief system 318 also comprises a masker signal injection module 354. The masker signal injection module 354 is configured to inject the channelized tinnitus masker signal into the sound processing channels of the sound processing path 351. That is, one or more components of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 are combined with, or otherwise applied to, channelized signals in a corresponding sound processing channel (i.e., the components of the channelized tinnitus masker signal are separately applied/combined with separate channelized signals). As a result, the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 forms part of the one or more output signals generated by the sound processor 312 for use in compensation of a hearing loss of a recipient of the cochlear implant. The injection of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 into the sound processing channels of the sound processing path 351 is generally shown in
Injection of the channelized tinnitus masker signal into one or more sound processing channels could occur via a number of mechanisms, including, but not limited to: (1) summation/addition/superposition (unweighted or weighted), (2) gated or rules based selective injection (e.g., injection only occurs if the channel level is above/below some criteria, such as the masker signal level) and/or the post-filterbank processing module output level, (3) random or stochastic injection, etc. The injection of the channelized tinnitus masker signal into one or more of the sound processing channels could also be further controlled by time-based or temporal-based rules, including, but not limited to: (1) simultaneous injection into all or a plurality of channels, (2) round robin or multiplexed selection of channels for injection, (3) random or occasional selection of channels for injection, etc. The channelized tinnitus masker signal may be injected into all of the sound processing channels or a subset of the sound processing channels that are either contiguous or non-contiguous.
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
As noted, the processing location 356 at which the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 in
The sound processor 312 also comprises the channel mapping module 350. The channel mapping module 350 is configured to map the amplitudes of the selected signals 357 into a set of stimulation commands that represent the attributes of stimulation signals (current signals) that are to be delivered to the recipient so as to evoke perception of the received sound signals. This channel mapping may include, for example, threshold and comfort level mapping, dynamic range adjustments (e.g., compression), volume adjustments, etc., and may encompass sequential and/or simultaneous stimulation paradigms.
In the embodiment of
As noted, the filterbank 344, the post-filterbank processing module 346, the channel selection module 348, and the channel mapping module 350 collectively form a sound processing path 351 that converts the one or more received sound signals into one or more output signals for use in compensation of a hearing loss of a recipient of the cochlear implant. In other words, the sound processing path 351 extends from the filterbank 344 to the channel mapping module 350. In
It is to be noted that embodiments presented herein include the ability to create channelized tinnitus masker signals having different numbers of components (e.g., more or less than 22 channels is possible). For example, less than 22 channels are required in the signal path (e.g., when using the CIS coding strategy) and/or less than 22 channels are mapped to electrodes. In other cases, an electrode array with less than 22 electrodes is available, and therefore usually less than 22 channels are present in the signal path (e.g., some electrode arrays may only have 8 or 10 electrodes, resulting in the use of fewer than 22 channels the signal processing path). As a result, ‘m’ and ‘n,’ as used to refer to both channels and components of a channelized tinnitus masker signal are configurable and may vary in different embodiments of the present invention.
As noted,
For example,
More specifically, in the embodiment of
The channel mapping module 350 is configured to map the amplitudes of the selected signals 457, after combination with the components of the channelized tinnitus masker 449, into a set of output signals 459. The output signals 459 comprise stimulation commands that represent the attributes of stimulation signals that are to be delivered to the recipient.
In the above embodiment of
The embodiment of
For example,
In the embodiment of
The tinnitus signal generator 352 comprises a random vector generator (RVG) 662 that operates as a sound (e.g., noise) source. The random vector generator 662 generates sounds 663 according to one or more samples 661. The tinnitus signal generator 352 also comprises a modulator 664 that modulates, at 665, the sounds 663 generated by the random vector generator 662. The modulation, which is based on one or more variables 667, is used to create, for example, random (i.e., less constant) sounds or more realistic tinnitus relief sounds, rather than a constant sound (e.g., wave or beach sounds, waterfall sounds, etc.). In certain embodiments, the modulator 664 is configured to at least one of randomly or pseudo-randomly modulate noise samples 661 in order to generate the channelized tinnitus masker signal.
A variety of input parameters may be used to control generation of a channelized tinnitus masker signal (i.e., control operational settings of the tinnitus signal generator 352). These input parameters may be used to control settings related to, for example, the type of sounds (e.g., noise) generated by the tinnitus signal generator, type of sound distributions (e.g., uniform, Gaussian, etc.), levels, modulation type, modulation frequency, channel shaping rules, etc. These settings may, potentially, be set on a per-channel basis (i.e., the sound attributes may be changed and optimized individually per channel). In practice, it is expected that some parameters may be applied unchanged across all channels.
In general, the tinnitus signal generator 352 is aware of the number of sound processing channels present in associated sound processor, as well as the frequency sub-bands that each of those channels cover. As such, the tinnitus signal generator 352 creates an amplitude value for each channel. So, for 22 channels, the tinnitus signal generator 352 creates 22 amplitude samples at any one time, one or more of which can then be injected into the signal path. Stated differently, a channelized tinnitus masker signal generated by a tinnitus signal generator in accordance with embodiments presented herein comprises a series of amplitude components at frequency sub-bands corresponding to the channels of the associated sound processor. In certain examples, the amplitude components are generated without phase information, while in other embodiments the phase information is included. In addition, the frequency sub-bands may not correspond to the channels. For example, in the case where a system has less than 22 channels (e.g., one electrode switched off), it may be undesirable to remap the frequency ranges of all of the 22 channels of the tinnitus masker signal. Therefore, in such embodiments one of the components of the tinnitus masker signal may simply be omitted, and the remaining 21 may be an “approximate” fit to the remaining frequency range. In other words there may not be a direct correspondence between tinnitus masker signal components and the channels and, as such, it is possible to inject non-matched frequency range signals from the tinnitus signal generator 352 into the sound processing channels, even if there is not precise correspondence/matching.
As noted, all or a portion of a channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 may be injected into sound processing channels of the sound processing path 351. Also as noted, the injection of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 may be controlled, for example, based on one or more rules (i.e., selective injection).
More specifically, the gating function 668 performs a comparison of channel amplitudes (i.e., amplitudes of the channelized signals) to the amplitude of a corresponding component of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349. Only components of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349 that have amplitudes that are larger than the amplitudes of the channel signals are passed through for injection into the sound processing path 351 (i.e., if the level of the tinnitus masker at each analysis pass is lower than the channel signal at that time, then the channel signal is passed through without addition of the masker signal). The enable function 669 operates as an on/off control for the injection of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 349.
The random vector generator 662 may generate a number of different types of sounds 663 for use in tinnitus relief. For example, the random vector generator 662 may generate white noise, pink noise, etc. Each of these different types of noise has one or more defining characteristics. For example, white noise refers to noise having an equal energy per frequency, while pink noise refers to noise having a 6 decibel (dB) per octave roll off. In one example, the random vector generator 662 generates a specific type of noise which has equal energy per sound processing channel, referred to herein as “yellow noise,” and, accordingly, the corresponding channelized tinnitus masker signal as an equal energy per sound processing channel. That is, in embodiments utilizing yellow noise, for every sound processing channel, whether it contains a wide frequency range (e.g., in higher frequencies) or a narrow frequency range (e.g., in low frequencies), the tinnitus masker signal energy is equal per channel (i.e., same average energy per channel at which the masker is applied). An advantage of yellow noise is that it is independent of the number of channels or the frequency boundaries of those channels, or any other channel characteristics.
As noted,
More specifically,
In the embodiment of
In general, the channel profiler 770 applies a set of rules to suitably adjust the masker so as to best match the needs of the recipient. As shown in
In certain arrangement, a tinnitus masking signal may mask a recipient's tinnitus, but it may also be noticeable and/or bothersome to the recipient. The channel shaping provided by channel profile 770 may be advantageous so as to ensure that the tinnitus masking sound achieves the tinnitus masking, but does so in manner that is not, for example, too distracting for the recipient.
Channel profiler 770 is shown separate from tinnitus signal generator merely to facilitate description and understanding of the present invention. It is to be appreciated that the channel shaping functionality of the channel profiler 770 may be incorporated within the tinnitus signal generator 352. For example, it is possible that the channel shaping may be performed before the modulation operations described elsewhere herein.
It is to be appreciated that
The triangular shaping window 872 of
For example,
It is to be appreciated the channel shaping windows shown in
As described above, tinnitus relief systems in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may operate based on various input parameters. These input parameters may include settings related to, for example, the type of sounds (e.g., noise) generated by the tinnitus signal generator, type of sound distributions (e.g., uniform, Gaussian, etc.), levels, modulation type, modulation frequency, channel shaping rules, etc. Tinnitus can only be perceived by the recipient, and, as such, the tinnitus relief that is most effective for a recipient is a highly personal preference. Therefore, it may be advantageous for a tinnitus relief system to allow a recipient or other user to control, potentially in real-time, the various input parameters so as to adapt the tinnitus relief to the recipient's personal preferences.
More specifically,
While
The tinnitus relief system 1518 is similar to tinnitus relief system 718 of
The above embodiments have been primarily described with reference to the generation of noises or other sounds for use in tinnitus relief by an on-board tinnitus signal generator.
More specifically,
As noted, the device interface 1585 is configured to receive the tinnitus relief sound 1586 via a wired or wireless link. As such, the interface 1585 may comprise, or be connected to, a physical input port (e.g., an auxiliary input 311) or a wireless transceiver. When a tinnitus relief sound 1586 is received from an external source, the sound processing unit 1610 may be configured to enter a special operational mode so that the received tinnitus relief sound 1586 is provided to the tinnitus signal generator 352, and not the sound processing path 351.
The above embodiments have been described with reference to cochlear implants. However, it is to be appreciated that embodiments of the present invention may also be implemented in other hearing prostheses. For example,
An electro-acoustic hearing prosthesis delivers deliver both acoustic stimulation (i.e., acoustic stimulation signals) and electrical stimulation (i.e., electrical stimulation signals) to a recipient. Acoustic stimulation combined with electrical stimulation is sometimes referred to herein as electro-acoustic stimulation. As such, the sound processing unit 1710 includes an electro-acoustic sound processor 1712 that is generally configured to execute sound processing and coding to convert the sound signals received via sound input elements into coded data signals that represent acoustic and/or electrical stimulation for delivery to the recipient. This is shown in
The segment 1751(B) (i.e., hearing aid sound processing path) comprises a filterbank 1788, a post-filterbank processing module 1790, and a re-synthesis module 1792. Due to the presence of the parallel path segments, for ease of illustration and description, the elements of the sound processing path segment 1751(A) are shown and sometimes referred to using the prefix “cochlear implant (CI),” while the elements of the sound processing path segment 1751(B) are shown and sometimes referred to using the prefix “hearing aid (HA).”
In
As noted, the sound processing path segment 1751(B) begins at HA filterbank 1788. Similar to the CI filterbank 344, the HA filterbank 1788 uses the pre-filtered input signal 343 to generate a suitable set of bandwidth limited (channelized) signals, sometimes referred to herein as a band-pass filtered signals, which represent the spectral components of the received sounds signal that are to be utilized for subsequent hearing aid sound processing. That is, the filterbank 1788 is a plurality of band-pass filters that separates the pre-filtered input signal 343 into multiple components, each one carrying a single frequency-limited sub-band of the original signal (i.e., frequency components of the received sounds signal as included in pre-filtered input signal 343). The channelized signals are referred to herein as being separated into, or forming, different sound processing channels. The number ‘y’ of channels and channelized signals generated by the filterbank 1788 may depend on a number of different factors including, but not limited to, processing strategy, recipient preference(s), etc.
At the output of the filterbank 1788, the channelized signals are referred to as pre-processed signals 1789. The pre-processed signals 1789 are provided to the post-filterbank processing module 1790. The post-filterbank processing module 1790 is configured to perform a number of sound processing operations on the pre-processed signals 1789. These sound processing operations include, for example gain adjustments (e.g., multichannel gain control), noise reduction operations, signal enhancement operations, etc., in one or more of the channels. After performing the sound processing operations, the post-filterbank processing module 1790 outputs a plurality of processed channelized signals 1791. The above description of hearing aid operations is given as an example only, and more sophisticated or less sophisticated hearing aid implementations are possible in accordance with embodiments presented herein.
As noted, the sound processing unit 1710 also includes a tinnitus relief system 1718 that operates with the electro-acoustic sound processor 1712. In the embodiment of
In the above cochlear implant embodiments, a generated channelized tinnitus masker signal typically included ‘m’ components, where ‘m’ was equal to the number of cochlear implant processing channels. In the embodiment of
The tinnitus relief system 1718 also comprises a channel profiler 1770 to perform channel shaping of the channelized tinnitus masker signal 1749 and, accordingly, generate a shaped channelized tinnitus masker signal (shaped tinnitus masker signal) 1771. A masker signal injection module 1754 is configured to inject the shaped tinnitus masker signal 1771.
The injection of the shaped tinnitus masker signal 1771 into the cochlear implant sound processing channels is generally shown in
As noted, the hearing aid sound processing path 1751(B) terminates at the re-synthesis module 1792. The re-synthesis module 1792 generates, from the processed channelized signals 1791 and the shaped tinnitus masker signal 1771, an output signal 1793. The output signal 1793 is used to drive an electroacoustic transducer, such as a receiver 1794, so that the transducer generates an acoustic signal for delivery to the recipient. In other words, the hearing aid sound processing path 1751(B) generates one or more output signals further comprise an electroacoustic transducer drive signal. As such, the re-synthesis module 1792 operates as an output block configured to convert the plurality of channelized signals into a plurality of output signals. Although not shown in
As detailed above, presented herein are techniques for directly injecting a tinnitus relief signal into the channels of a hearing prosthesis. Also as detailed above, the tinnitus relief signal is injected into the back-end of the sound processing path so as to avoid processing operations that may interfere within the tinnitus relief (i.e., the masker signal is injected at a processing location after the majority of gain control and/or noise reduction has taken place).
It is to be appreciated that the embodiments presented herein are not mutually exclusive.
The invention described and claimed herein is not to be limited in scope by the specific preferred embodiments herein disclosed, since these embodiments are intended as illustrations, and not limitations, of several aspects of the invention. Any equivalent embodiments are intended to be within the scope of this invention. Indeed, various modifications of the invention in addition to those shown and described herein will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing description. Such modifications are also intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
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