355 research outputs found
A Robust Zero-point Attraction LMS Algorithm on Near Sparse System Identification
The newly proposed norm constraint zero-point attraction Least Mean
Square algorithm (ZA-LMS) demonstrates excellent performance on exact sparse
system identification. However, ZA-LMS has less advantage against standard LMS
when the system is near sparse. Thus, in this paper, firstly the near sparse
system modeling by Generalized Gaussian Distribution is recommended, where the
sparsity is defined accordingly. Secondly, two modifications to the ZA-LMS
algorithm have been made. The norm penalty is replaced by a partial
norm in the cost function, enhancing robustness without increasing the
computational complexity. Moreover, the zero-point attraction item is weighted
by the magnitude of estimation error which adjusts the zero-point attraction
force dynamically. By combining the two improvements, Dynamic Windowing ZA-LMS
(DWZA-LMS) algorithm is further proposed, which shows better performance on
near sparse system identification. In addition, the mean square performance of
DWZA-LMS algorithm is analyzed. Finally, computer simulations demonstrate the
effectiveness of the proposed algorithm and verify the result of theoretical
analysis.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figure
Doctor of Philosophy
dissertationHearing aids suffer from the problem of acoustic feedback that limits the gain provided by hearing aids. Moreover, the output sound quality of hearing aids may be compromised in the presence of background acoustic noise. Digital hearing aids use advanced signal processing to reduce acoustic feedback and background noise to improve the output sound quality. However, it is known that the output sound quality of digital hearing aids deteriorates as the hearing aid gain is increased. Furthermore, popular subband or transform domain digital signal processing in modern hearing aids introduces analysis-synthesis delays in the forward path. Long forward-path delays are not desirable because the processed sound combines with the unprocessed sound that arrives at the cochlea through the vent and changes the sound quality. In this dissertation, we employ a variable, frequency-dependent gain function that is lower at frequencies of the incoming signal where the information is perceptually insignificant. In addition, the method of this dissertation automatically identifies and suppresses residual acoustical feedback components at frequencies that have the potential to drive the system to instability. The suppressed frequency components are monitored and the suppression is removed when such frequencies no longer pose a threat to drive the hearing aid system into instability. Together, the method of this dissertation provides more stable gain over traditional methods by reducing acoustical coupling between the microphone and the loudspeaker of a hearing aid. In addition, the method of this dissertation performs necessary hearing aid signal processing with low-delay characteristics. The central idea for the low-delay hearing aid signal processing is a spectral gain shaping method (SGSM) that employs parallel parametric equalization (EQ) filters. Parameters of the parametric EQ filters and associated gain values are selected using a least-squares approach to obtain the desired spectral response. Finally, the method of this dissertation switches to a least-squares adaptation scheme with linear complexity at the onset of howling. The method adapts to the altered feedback path quickly and allows the patient to not lose perceivable information. The complexity of the least-squares estimate is reduced by reformulating the least-squares estimate into a Toeplitz system and solving it with a direct Toeplitz solver. The increase in stable gain over traditional methods and the output sound quality were evaluated with psychoacoustic experiments on normal-hearing listeners with speech and music signals. The results indicate that the method of this dissertation provides 8 to 12 dB more hearing aid gain than feedback cancelers with traditional fixed gain functions. Furthermore, experimental results obtained with real world hearing aid gain profiles indicate that the method of this dissertation provides less distortion in the output sound quality than classical feedback cancelers, enabling the use of more comfortable style hearing aids for patients with moderate to profound hearing loss. Extensive MATLAB simulations and subjective evaluations of the results indicate that the method of this dissertation exhibits much smaller forward-path delays with superior howling suppression capability
An Efficient & Less Complex Solution to Mitigate Impulsive Noise in Multi-Channel Feed-Forward ANC System with Online Secondary Path Modeling (OSPM)
This paper deals with impulsive noise (IN) in multichannel (MC) Active Noise Control (ANC) Systems with Online Secondary Path Modelling (OSPM) employing adaptive algorithms for the first time. It compares performance of various existing techniques belonging to varied computational complexity range and proposes four new methods, namely: FxRLS-VSSLMS, VSSLMS-VSSLMS, FxLMAT-VSSLMS and NSS MFxLMAT-VSSLMS to deal with modest to very high impulsive noise (IN). Simulation results show that these proposed methods demonstrated improved performance in terms of fast convergence speed, lowest steady state error, robustness and stability under impulsive environment in addition to modelling accuracy for stationary as well as non-stationary environment besides reducing computational complexity many folds
Control of feedback for assistive listening devices
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
Subband Adaptive Modeling of Digital Hearing Aids
In this thesis, the application of a subband adaptive model to characterize compression behaviour of five digital hearing aids is investigated. Using a signal-to-error ratio metric, modeling performance is determined by varying the number of analysis bands in the subband structure as well as consideration of three adaptive algorithms. The normalized least mean-squares (NLMS), the affine projection algorithm (APA), and the recursive least-squares (RLS) algorithms are employed using a range of parameters to determine the impact on modeling performance. Using the subband adaptive model to estimate the time-varying frequency response of each hearing aid allows the Perceptual Evaluation of Speech Quality (PESQ) mean-opinion score (MOS) to be computed. The PESQ MOS facilitates an estimation of a subjective assessment of speech quality using an objective score. Initial results suggest the PESQ MOS score is able to differentiate speech processed by hearing aids allowing them to be ranked accordingly. Further work is required to obtain subjective assessments of the processed speech signals and determine if possible correlations exist
System Identification with Applications in Speech Enhancement
As the increasing popularity of integrating hands-free telephony on mobile portable devices
and the rapid development of voice over internet protocol, identification of acoustic
systems has become desirable for compensating distortions introduced to speech signals
during transmission, and hence enhancing the speech quality. The objective of this research
is to develop system identification algorithms for speech enhancement applications
including network echo cancellation and speech dereverberation.
A supervised adaptive algorithm for sparse system identification is developed for
network echo cancellation. Based on the framework of selective-tap updating scheme
on the normalized least mean squares algorithm, the MMax and sparse partial update
tap-selection strategies are exploited in the frequency domain to achieve fast convergence
performance with low computational complexity. Through demonstrating how
the sparseness of the network impulse response varies in the transformed domain, the
multidelay filtering structure is incorporated to reduce the algorithmic delay.
Blind identification of SIMO acoustic systems for speech dereverberation in the
presence of common zeros is then investigated. First, the problem of common zeros is
defined and extended to include the presence of near-common zeros. Two clustering algorithms
are developed to quantify the number of these zeros so as to facilitate the study
of their effect on blind system identification and speech dereverberation. To mitigate such
effect, two algorithms are developed where the two-stage algorithm based on channel
decomposition identifies common and non-common zeros sequentially; and the forced
spectral diversity approach combines spectral shaping filters and channel undermodelling
for deriving a modified system that leads to an improved dereverberation performance.
Additionally, a solution to the scale factor ambiguity problem in subband-based blind system identification is developed, which motivates further research on subbandbased
dereverberation techniques. Comprehensive simulations and discussions demonstrate
the effectiveness of the aforementioned algorithms. A discussion on possible directions
of prospective research on system identification techniques concludes this thesis
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