Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
An important goal of automobile manufacturers is to build a vehicle which shields the interior from exterior noise. The perceived quality of a vehicle can depend on the level of sound insulation. However, times do exist when a vehicle occupant (e.g., driver) wants to hear what is happening on the outside of the vehicle. For instance, the driver may want to communicate with a person directly or use an outside intercom at a restaurant drive-through, hear outside nature or background sounds. While diagnosing vehicle performance during a test drive, a mechanic may be assisted by hearing some aspect of the sounds produced by the vehicle from the exterior while it is in motion. Merely opening a window may not be adequate for various reasons including relative positions, weather, quietness of the exterior sound, or hearing loss which the occupant may possess. A multitude of these reasons may easily be present at the same time.
Use of simple sound reproduction (e.g., an intercom) between the interior and exterior of a vehicle may not achieve satisfactory results. Depending upon the state of the vehicle and the nature of the surroundings, undesirable noises (e.g., wind) may overwhelm the desired sounds. Furthermore, some occupants of a vehicle may have hearing loss that impacts their ability to perceive sounds being reproduced.
The present invention relates in general to hearing assistance and, more specifically, to hearing assistance which can be provided by a vehicle audio system. The audio system may increase a reproduced sound level at frequencies which the listener is deficient in hearing. The interior of a vehicle is designed to keep exterior sound out of the cabin, but there are many circumstances where the occupant would like to hear the exterior sounds. This invention eliminates several factors which prevent an occupant from hearing exterior sound.
In one aspect of the invention, an apparatus that transfers sounds from the exterior to the interior of a vehicle. It uses an array of exterior transducers and an array of interior transducers to reproduce sounds from the exterior to the interior of the vehicle. The apparatus may comprise a control circuit which adjusts the sound level (e.g., gain) by frequency of the audio signals received exterior to the vehicle to generate a modified audio signal. The adjustments for gain by frequency may include compensation for hearing loss, compensation for competing sounds in the interior of the vehicle, and attenuation adjustments (i.e., filtering) for unwanted exterior noise. The unwanted exterior noise (e.g., wind noise) can be estimated by vehicle speed and exterior transducer location. An amplifier transfers the modified audio signal from the control circuit to the array of interior transducers.
In another aspect of the invention, an apparatus receives audio on the exterior of the vehicle and generates a modified audio signal by filtering unwanted audio from the exterior audio, adjusting for gain by frequency according to hearing deficiencies, and adjusting for gain by frequency according to background audio in the interior of the vehicle. The apparatus reproduces the sound in the interior of the vehicle by amplifying the audio according to the combination of filters and gains according to frequency of the sound. A limiter may be used to restrict the modified audio signal to a maximum gain. Using multiple audio channels for both the exterior and interior sounds, audio is reproduced in the vehicle interior with a sound field that corresponds with the external audio’s original direction.
Embodiments of the invention involve a vehicle being used as a specialized hearing aid by using an apparatus to transfer exterior sound to the interior of the vehicle. To assist in hearing, the original exterior audio signal is changed to a modified audio signal using gain and attenuation profiles and in some instances shifting sounds from one frequency range to another. This beneficial modification is completed by adapting the signal to account for factors which reduce the ability of an occupant to adequately hear exterior audio. Factors which can inhibit accurate hearing of exterior sound are individual hearing deficiencies, exterior noise sources, and sources of other interior noises. An array of transducers (e.g., microphones) is used outside of the vehicle to capture the originating exterior audio signal, and an array of transducers (e.g., loudspeakers) is used inside of the vehicle to reproduce a multi-channel modified audio signal in a way that recreates the apparent locations from which the external sounds are coming (i.e., duplicating the external sound field). A multi-channel audio amplifier drives the internal transducers using the modified audio signal.
The array of external microphones 24-27 on the exterior of a moving vehicle is subject to significant wind noise. This noise is dependent on the speed of the vehicle and the location of the microphones on the vehicle. It is advantageous to mitigate the effects of wind noise on the microphone signals before any further processing of audio.
After the audio signals from the microphone array are scrubbed of exterior wind noise, there are still other factors limiting the ability of the occupant to hear exterior sounds, one of which is hearing loss.
The modified audio signals are reproduced by internal speakers to be heard by the vehicle occupant. The main loudspeakers for the passenger cabin can be used. In order to direct the reproduced audio to an intended occupant when more than one occupant is present in the passenger cabin, speakers mounted in the headrests for the respective seating positions can be used. Since the headrest speakers are close to the head of the intended occupant, the modified sounds can be directed to the person having the associated hearing loss compensation without those sounds being overwhelming to other occupants. In another embodiment, modified audio signals can be directed to only the main speakers closest to the intended occupant, although directional cues in the resulting sounds would be lost.
Competing sounds in the interior of the vehicle can mask the desirable sounds that are being reproduced from the exterior. A frequency selective boost of the desired exterior sounds at the corresponding frequencies where the competing sounds are present can help overcome any masking of the desired sounds from the exterior.
The gain and attenuation profiles may each be comprised of a function wherein a positive or negative gain is applied at each respective frequency within a range of audio frequencies. The separate gain profiles and attenuation profiles can be applied to the exterior audio signals from the microphone array either separately or together. When processed together, they can be combined in a summing block 44. Summing and applying all profiles to the audio signal might result in an audio signal that is too large (e.g., results in clipping). Therefore, a limiter 45A may be provided to restrict the adjustments made by the profiles 43 to a maximum predetermined gain. After being adjusted by limiter 45A, a combined profile is provided to an audio processor 47 in modifier 46 which applies the frequency-selective gains (e.g., increases and decreases in signal level) to a multi-channel audio signal based on the audio signals from the microphone array. Audio processor 47 may preferably be a digital audio processor which may convert the gain-modified audio signals to analog signals for distribution to internal transducers (e.g., main cabin speakers 20-23) via a multi-channel amplifier, thereby reproducing the apparent direction to sound sources outside the vehicle.
In a cabin with multiple occupants with both normal and poor hearing, reproduction of the compensated audio into the cabin could be objectionable to the occupant with normal hearing. In some embodiments, control circuit logic 41 may be configured to suspend adjustments when a normal hearing person is in the cabin or when the hard of hearing person is wearing their hearing aids, for example. Alternatively, the left/right and front/rear fader controls of the audio processor can be used to push the adjusted audio to the speaker(s) nearest the person hard of hearing.
Hearing deficiencies may be characterized by hearing loss data which are known by the occupant are entered into the vehicle and saved. The identity of the occupant is then selected which corresponds with a gain profile and/or frequency shifting or compression. If the occupant does not have saved hearing loss data, deficiencies can alternatively be estimated by age, wherein predetermined age ranges have their own corresponding gain profiles and/or frequency shifting or compression. These specific quantities of hearing loss data, specific gain profiles, and frequency shifting or compression are respectively similar to the graphs in
There are exterior sounds that disturb the important and useful exterior sounds from being clearly received by the exterior transducers or microphones. A primary example is wind. The noise generated by the wind is dependent upon speed and microphone placement. Each speed/microphone may have a unique noise level profile. It may be possible for noise in certain frequencies to be entirely filtered out. This is dependent on whether these frequencies can represent useful sounds (e.g., spoken sounds, sirens, or other desirable sounds outside the vehicle). For instance, if the frequency contains only useless noises like wind, the frequency can be entirely filtered out from the signal transferred from the control circuit to the interior transducers. However, noises that are produced in a frequency containing both useless and useful noise, the frequency cannot be filtered out completely, but the sound level can be altered based upon their frequency prior to any modification based on hearing loss or competing interior noise sources.
There are interior sounds produced in, and or present in, the cabin that disturb the hearing of the reproduced exterior sounds. These sounds can include HVAC noise, vehicle body noise, and engine noises (which vary by speed) which enter the cabin (e.g., depending on factors such as door seal deterioration which depends on vehicle age). The HVAC operating in the cabin causes noise depending on the speed of the blower and the positions of airflow dampers. For each of these factors, the control circuit can be configured to apply a corresponding correction to the reproduced sound. Similar to a saved occupant identity or wind speed, each HVAC blower speed/damper positions, vehicle speed, and vehicle age may have a respective model or look-up table providing respective gain adjustments or profiles.
A sound field created by the interior transducers can also be adjusted based on the original sound field outside the vehicle so that the original directional relationships are preserved as heard at the occupant’s position. An originating exterior audio signal which is clearly originated in a distinct location will be transferred to the interior transducers that mirror the location of the originating exterior audio signal. The modified audio signal can be adjusted based on the occupant’s seat position, feeding the sound to the estimated location of the occupant’s head. If the interior transducers are headphones or wireless transducers, then the modified audio signal can be adjusted to compensate for any turning of the head away from the forward direction of the vehicle, for example. The adjustment will depend on the occupant’s direction of gaze so that the modified audio signal can constantly mirror the location of the originating exterior audio signal.