500 research outputs found

    Output SNR analysis of integrated active noise control and noise reduction in hearing aids under a single speech source scenario

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    International audienceThis paper analyses the output signal-to-noise ratio for a standard noise reduction scheme and for an integrated active noise control and noise reduction scheme, both applied in the hearing aid framework including the effects of signal leakage through an open fitting and secondary path effects. In particular, a standard noise reduction scheme based on the multichannel Wiener filter and an integrated active noise control and noise reduction scheme based on the filtered-X multichannel Wiener filter are analysed and their signal-to-noise ratio are derived under a single speech source scenario

    Control of feedback for assistive listening devices

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    Acoustic feedback refers to the undesired acoustic coupling between the loudspeaker and microphone in hearing aids. This feedback channel poses limitations to the normal operation of hearing aids under varying acoustic scenarios. This work makes contributions to improve the performance of adaptive feedback cancellation techniques and speech quality in hearing aids. For this purpose a two microphone approach is proposed and analysed; and probe signal injection methods are also investigated and improved upon

    Objective Assessment of Machine Learning Algorithms for Speech Enhancement in Hearing Aids

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    Speech enhancement in assistive hearing devices has been an area of research for many decades. Noise reduction is particularly challenging because of the wide variety of noise sources and the non-stationarity of speech and noise. Digital signal processing (DSP) algorithms deployed in modern hearing aids for noise reduction rely on certain assumptions on the statistical properties of undesired signals. This could be disadvantageous in accurate estimation of different noise types, which subsequently leads to suboptimal noise reduction. In this research, a relatively unexplored technique based on deep learning, i.e. Recurrent Neural Network (RNN), is used to perform noise reduction and dereverberation for assisting hearing-impaired listeners. For noise reduction, the performance of the deep learning model was evaluated objectively and compared with that of open Master Hearing Aid (openMHA), a conventional signal processing based framework, and a Deep Neural Network (DNN) based model. It was found that the RNN model can suppress noise and improve speech understanding better than the conventional hearing aid noise reduction algorithm and the DNN model. The same RNN model was shown to reduce reverberation components with proper training. A real-time implementation of the deep learning model is also discussed

    Evaluation of acoustic noise in magnetic resonance imaging

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    Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a technique in which strong static and dynamic magnetic fields are used to create virtual slices of the human body. The process of MR imaging is associated with several health and safety issues which may negatively affect patient and radiological health workers. Potentially hazardous are biological effects of both the static and dynamic magnetic fields, the torques of the magnetic fields acting on ferromagnetic objects, thermal effects, and the negative effects of high acoustic sound pressures. The subject of this dissertation is the evaluation and modification of acoustic noise generated during MRI

    An application of an auditory periphery model in speaker identification

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    The number of applications of automatic Speaker Identification (SID) is growing due to the advanced technologies for secure access and authentication in services and devices. In 2016, in a study, the Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators with Fast Acting Compression (CAR FAC) cochlear model achieved the best performance among seven recent cochlear models to fit a set of human auditory physiological data. Motivated by the performance of the CAR-FAC, I apply this cochlear model in an SID task for the first time to produce a similar performance to a human auditory system. This thesis investigates the potential of the CAR-FAC model in an SID task. I investigate the capability of the CAR-FAC in text-dependent and text-independent SID tasks. This thesis also investigates contributions of different parameters, nonlinearities, and stages of the CAR-FAC that enhance SID accuracy. The performance of the CAR-FAC is compared with another recent cochlear model called the Auditory Nerve (AN) model. In addition, three FFT-based auditory features – Mel frequency Cepstral Coefficient (MFCC), Frequency Domain Linear Prediction (FDLP), and Gammatone Frequency Cepstral Coefficient (GFCC), are also included to compare their performance with cochlear features. This comparison allows me to investigate a better front-end for a noise-robust SID system. Three different statistical classifiers: a Gaussian Mixture Model with Universal Background Model (GMM-UBM), a Support Vector Machine (SVM), and an I-vector were used to evaluate the performance. These statistical classifiers allow me to investigate nonlinearities in the cochlear front-ends. The performance is evaluated under clean and noisy conditions for a wide range of noise levels. Techniques to improve the performance of a cochlear algorithm are also investigated in this thesis. It was found that the application of a cube root and DCT on cochlear output enhances the SID accuracy substantially

    Signal processing algorithms for digital hearing aids

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    Hearing loss is a problem that severely affects the speech communication and disqualify most hearing-impaired people from holding a normal life. Although the vast majority of hearing loss cases could be corrected by using hearing aids, however, only a scarce of hearing-impaired people who could be benefited from hearing aids purchase one. This irregular use of hearing aids arises from the existence of a problem that, to date, has not been solved effectively and comfortably: the automatic adaptation of the hearing aid to the changing acoustic environment that surrounds its user. There are two approaches aiming to comply with it. On the one hand, the "manual" approach, in which the user has to identify the acoustic situation and choose the adequate amplification program has been found to be very uncomfortable. The second approach requires to include an automatic program selection within the hearing aid. This latter approach is deemed very useful by most hearing aid users, even if its performance is not completely perfect. Although the necessity of the aforementioned sound classification system seems to be clear, its implementation is a very difficult matter. The development of an automatic sound classification system in a digital hearing aid is a challenging goal because of the inherent limitations of the Digital Signal Processor (DSP) the hearing aid is based on. The underlying reason is that most digital hearing aids have very strong constraints in terms of computational capacity, memory and battery, which seriously limit the implementation of advanced algorithms in them. With this in mind, this thesis focuses on the design and implementation of a prototype for a digital hearing aid able to automatically classify the acoustic environments hearing aid users daily face on and select the amplification program that is best adapted to such environment aiming at enhancing the speech intelligibility perceived by the user. The most important contribution of this thesis is the implementation of a prototype for a digital hearing aid that automatically classifies the acoustic environment surrounding its user and selects the most appropriate amplification program for such environment, aiming at enhancing the sound quality perceived by the user. The battery life of this hearing aid is 140 hours, which has been found to be very similar to that of hearing aids in the market, and what is of key importance, there is still about 30% of the DSP resources available for implementing other algorithms

    Ultrasound cleaning of microfilters

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