1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a hearing assistance system comprising an audio signal transmission unit for wireless transmission of a stereo audio signal and at least one ear worn unit comprising a hearing instrument, such as a hearing aid, and a wireless audio signal receiver unit for supplying the hearing instrument with an audio signal received from the transmission unit.
2. Description of Related Art
Wireless audio signal transmission systems may comprise wireless microphones which are used for transmitting audio signals captured from the voice of a speaker to ear level hearing instruments. For example, wireless microphones may be used by teachers teaching hearing impaired persons in a class room (wherein the audio signal is captured by the wireless microphone of the teacher are transmitted to a plurality of receiver units worn by the hearing persons listening to the teacher) or in cases where several persons are speaking to a hearing impaired person (for example, in a professional meeting, wherein each speaker is provided with a wireless microphone and with the receiver units of the hearing impaired person receiving audio signals from all wireless microphones). Another example is audio tour guiding, wherein the guide uses a wireless microphone.
Another application of wireless audio transmission systems is the case in which the transmission unit is designed as an assistive listening device. In this case, the transmission unit may include a wireless microphone for capturing ambient sound, in particular from a speaker close to the user, and/or a gateway to an external audio device, such as a mobile phone, a TV set or a HiFi system; in this case the transmission unit serves to supply external audio signals to the receiver units worn by the user.
A wireless audio link may be, for example, implemented as an FM (frequency modulation) radio link operating in the 200 MHz frequency band. Examples of analog wireless FM systems, particularly suited for school applications, are described in European Patent Application EP 1 864 320 A1 which corresponds to U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,648,919; 8,158,476; and 8,345,900.
In recent systems the analog FM transmission technology is replaced by employing digital modulation techniques for audio signal transmission, most of them working on other frequency bands than the former 200 MHz band, such as in the 2.4 GHz ISM band.
In general, audio signal receiver units may be integrated within hearing instrument, or they may be provided as a separate device which is connected to the hearing instrument via a standardized electric and mechanic interface (“audio shoe”).
European Patent Application EP 1 531 650 A2 and corresponding U.S. Patent Application Publication US 2005/0100182 A1 relate to a wireless hearing assistance system wherein the transmission unit is designed as an assistive listening device which may transmit a stereo audio signal via a first frequency channel which transmits a first portion of the stereo signal to a first hearing instrument and a second portion of the stereo signal via a second frequency channel to a second hearing instrument.
U.S. Patent Application Publication US 2006/0233385 A1 relates to a binaural hearing aid system wherein the gain setting in each of the two hearing aids is changed depending on whether the other hearing aid is active or not, with the activity to the other hearing aid being checked via a binaural link.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,014,379 B2 relates to a binaural hearing aid system, wherein in each of the two hearing aids the parameter setting of both hearing aids is stored, and wherein the hearing aids are provided with a communication link for exchanging the parameter settings between each other.
International Patent Application Publication WO 2004/110099 A2 relates to a Bluetooth type wireless network, wherein two binaural hearing aids are connected to each other and to external devices, like a mobile phone, via the network.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,565,444 B2 relates to a smartphone which senses the presence of one or two speakers in a headset and a microphone in order to adjust audio output signal of the smartphone according to the stereo or mono capability of the headset connected to the audio output.
International Patent Application Publication WO 2011/146659 A2 and corresponding U.S. Patent Application Publication 2011/0286615 relate to a stereo headset divided into two sub-systems, each one comprising an earpiece; one of the earpieces acts as a master in a network configuration with a Bluetooth type communication device, and the other earpiece acts as a slave, with information received by the master, such as information concerning stereo or mono signal choices, being transmitted to the slave device.
International Patent Application Publication WO 2008/122665 A1 and corresponding U.S. Patent Application Publication 2010/0067723 relate to user interface of a body-worn communication device for communicating with the head-worn listening device; the user interface may be used for manual signal selection and for manual change of hearing aid settings.
International Patent Application Publication 2007/110807 and corresponding U.S. Patent Application Publication 2011/0144779 relate to a headphone for a portable media player, which is capable of detecting the headphone configuration in order to switch from a mono to a stereo signal.
It is an object of the invention to provide for a wireless hearing assistance system comprising an audio signal transmission unit capable of wireless transmission of a stereo audio signal and at least one ear unit comprising a hearing instrument and a wireless audio signal receiver unit, wherein the system should be particularly easy to be used. It is a further object to provide for a corresponding hearing assistance method.
According to the invention, these objects are achieved by a hearing assistance system and method as described herein.
The invention is beneficial in that, by providing the receiver unit with information as to whether the respective the hearing instrument is fitted to the left ear or the right ear and with information as to whether, or not, there is a second ear unit worn at the other ear, and by designing the receiver unit to decide, depending on that information, to receive one of the left ear channel, the right ear channel and, if available, the respective mono channel of the audio signal and to supply it to the hearing instrument, an automatic—and thus very easy—handling of stereo signals is realized, i.e., the suitable stereo channel is recognized and supplied to the hearing instrument without the need for user interaction, irrespective of whether the user is wearing only one hearing instrument or two hearing instruments.
Hereinafter, examples of the invention will be illustrated by reference to the accompanying drawings.
In
The transmission unit 10 is provided for transmitting a stereo audio signal to the ear units 12R and 12L via a wireless audio link 20 transmitting the right ear stereo channel 20R and the left ear stereo channel 20L. The stereo audio signal may be supplied to the transmission unit 10 from external audio devices, such a TV set 22 or a mobile phone 24 via a wireless link 26 (such as a Bluetooth link) or from external audio devices, such as a music player 28, via a wired connection 30. In case that the audio signal supplied to the transmission unit 10 from the external audio device is a mono signal (such as from the mobile phone 24), the same mono signal will be transmitted by the transmission unit 10 via both channels 20R, 20L. In case that the audio signal supplied to the transmission unit 10 from the external device is a stereo signal, the transmission unit 10 typically transmits the signal as a stereo signal to the ear units 12R, 12L.
According to an alternative embodiment, the transmission unit 10 may be omitted in case that the audio source, i.e., the respective external audio device, such as the TV set 22, the mobile phone 24 or the music player 28, is able to directly stream the audio signals to the respective ear unit 12R, 12L.
The hearing aids 16R, 16L may be designed to exchange audio signals and/or control signals via a wireless, preferably inductive, link 32 in order to realize the binaural system.
The transmission unit 10 typically may be worn on the body of the user 18 of the hearing aids 16, for example on a neck loop. If the transmission unit 10 is designed as a mere audio streaming device, it does not comprise a microphone.
The stereo audio link 20 may be implemented, for example, as an analog FM link, or it may be realized as an analog or digital inductive link or as a digital HF link using, for example, the 2.4 GHz ISM band.
The transmission unit 10 is not restricted to body worn designs in case that the audio link 20 is implemented as a radio link (i.e., not as an inductive link)
In
The receiver unit 14 comprises an antenna 34, a receiver (or transceiver) 36 for receiving the audio signals transmitted via the link 20. The received audio signals are supplied to an audio signal processing unit 38 which supplies the processed signals to an audio input of the hearing aid 16 in order to supply the received audio signals to the audio signal processing unit 40 of the hearing aid 16. The receiver unit 14 also comprises a controller 42 for controlling the receiver 36 and the signal processing unit 38.
The hearing aid 16 comprises a microphone arrangement 44 for capturing audio signals from ambient sound and supplying them to the signal processing unit 40. The output of the signal processing unit 40 supplied to the electroacoustic output transducer (loudspeaker) 46. The hearing aid 16 also comprises a controller 48 for controlling the signal processing unit 40 and a memory 56. In case that the hearing aid 16 is designed as part of a binaural system, it also comprises an antenna 52 and a transceiver 54 for establishing the binaural link 32. The memory 56 contains fitting information of the hearing aid 16, e.g. the individual values of the fitting parameters, such as gain settings and frequency response curves, and information as to whether the hearing aid 16 is fitted to the left ear or to the right ear of the user 18. The memory 56 also may contain information as to whether there is a second ear unit 12 comprising another hearing aid 16 at the other ear, i.e. information as to whether the hearing aid 16 is part of a binaural fitting or not.
In case that the hearing aid 16 is provided with an antenna 52 and a transceiver 54 for establishing a binaural link 32, the hearing aid 16 can easily determine whether there is a hearing aid 16 worn at the other ear or not, namely from the fact whether binaural communication with another hearing instrument is possible or not (due to the limited range of such binaural wireless link 32, which typically is an inductive link, the hearing aid 16 usually could communicate only a hearing aid worn by the same user 18).
The hearing aid 16 is adapted to provide the receiver unit 14, via the interface 15, with information as to which ear the hearing aid 16 is fitted to and as to whether a second ear unit 12 is present at the other ear. This information is used by the controller 42 to decide whether the left ear channel 20L or the right ear channel 20R of the stereo signal or, if available, the respective mono channel of the audio signal is to be received/decoded and is to be supplied to the hearing aid 16.
Typically, the receiver unit 14 will be designed to decide to receive/decode that channel of the stereo signal corresponding to the ear to which the hearing aid 16 connected to the receiver unit 14 is fitted to: if the hearing aid 16 is fitted to the right ear, the receiver unit 14 will receive and supply the right ear channel 20R, and if the hearing aid 16 is fitted to the left ear, the receiver unit 14 will receive and supply the left ear channel 20L, irrespective of whether another ear unit 12 is present at the other ear or not.
However, in some cases it may be preferable that the receiver unit 14 receives and supplies the mono channel of the audio signal in case that no ear unit 12 is worn at the other ear. This is automatically set in the receiver unit 14.
In case that the hearing aid 16 is not designed for establishing a binaural link 32, information as to whether there is another ear unit 12 or not may be stored in a memory 58 of the receiver unit 14. Alternatively, in case that the receiver unit 14 is capable of establishing communication with another receiver unit 14, the receiver unit 14 may determine, from the fact whether it is possible or not to establish communication with another receiver unit 14, whether there is another ear unit 12 worn at the other ear.
In case of a binaural system both ear units 12R, 12L typically will be identical, i.e., the features described above with regard to the ear unit 12 of
Such a network may utilize a TDMA scheme in a broadcast mode, wherein each audio data packet is transmitted subsequently three times, i.e., transmission of each data packet is repeated twice. Such protocol typically is limited in that the available bandwidth is not sufficient for transmitting three audio channels in parallel, so that it is, for example, only possible to transmit the right ear stereo channel 20R (with the data packets being designated by “W” in
In the example of
The receiver units of the ear units 12 have been paired previously within the network of the transmission unit 10 and thus are able to listen to the beacons B periodically sent each 4 ms and can read all transmitted audio packets. In case that a stereo signal is transmitted, the right ear unit 12R would decode the right ear packets R, and the left ear unit 12L would decode the left ear packets L. In case that a mono signal is transmitted only, both ear units 12R and 12L would decode the same mono packets M.
The network communication may include a preliminary phase, wherein all capabilities of the ear units 12 would be exchanged with the transmission units 10, thereby selecting also the best audio bandwidth for the ear units 12.
In
In the example of
Such control strategy requires not only initial knowledge of the hearing aid configurations in the network but in addition requires regular updates of the configuration information. Such update could be implemented, for example, by each ear unit regularly transmitting a spontaneous message S to the transmission unit 10, indicating the presence of the respective ear unit within the network. For example, if in the example of
In the same manner, the audio bandwidth selected by the transmission unit 10 may be adapted to change in the network configuration (for example, if the hearing aid having the lowest bandwidth capability leaves the network, the audio bandwidth selected by the transmission unit 10 could be increased again).
Since there may be limits in the back-link range of the ear units, with the response message S probably not being received, there should be a delay setting inside the transmission unit 10 to conclude that an ear unit has left the network range.
In the system of
Such information available at the transmission unit 10 and at the ear units side, respectively, is exchanged between the ear units and the transmission unit 10 after being paired in the network maintained by the transmission unit 10.
Based on the information concerning the configuration of the ear units present in the network and on information concerning the selected audio source, the transmission unit 10 automatically adapts the audio stream with regard to stereo or mono, audio bandwidth, etc. In case that the ear unit of a monaurally fitted user does not respond after certain attempts, the transmission unit 10 will conclude that the respective listener has left the network range. However, if no response is obtained from one of the ear units worn by a binaurally fitted person, the transmission unit does not conclude that this listener has left the network range, as long as the other one of the ear units sends response messages.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/076059 | 12/10/2013 | WO | 00 |