Hearing aid with different assemblies for picking up further...

Electrical audio signal processing systems and devices – Hearing aids – electrical – Frequency transposition

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C381S320000, C375S372000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06240195

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a hearing aid with different assemblies for receiving further processing and adjusting an audio signal to the hearing ability of a hearing impaired person, wherein digital processing is performed in the hearing aid.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In the case of a hearing aid wearer having extremely low residual hearing, the hearing disability Is usually such that a partial cutoff of high pitched sounds occurs in a frequency region between 1 kHz and 2 kHz. In this cutoff of high pitch, the region between the hearing barrier and the discomfort barrier is very narrow, such that the region of an audio signal which is important for speech recognition cannot be satisfactorily detected, even given very high amplification. On the other hand, it should be avoided that the amplification becomes too high and the discomfort barrier is thereby crossed. The dynamic of the hearing field is about 100 dB in someone with normal hearing and can recede to 10 dB in a hearing-impaired person. Thus far, attempts to bring about an amplification adjustment in the hearing field have been accompanied by uncomfortable side effects—such as feedback-produced whistling tones or other acoustical disturbances—due to the high amplification.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a hearing aid of the type initially described wherein, given digital signal processing, an effective amplification is guaranteed without disturbing side effects, even in the region of the compressed hearing field.
The above object is achieved in a hearing aid constructed in accordance with the principles of the present invention having a number of different assemblies for picking up, processing and adjusting an acoustic signal to match a hearing ability (disability) of a hearing impaired person, wherein digital signal processing is performed in the hearing aid, the hearing aid having a buffer storage unit with a number of individual storage elements for receiving and storing digital data representing audio content of an incoming audio signal, the buffer storage unit shifting or transposing the digital data in a predetermined frequency region into another frequency region which is more easily detectable (understandable) to the hearing impaired person. The read-in frequency and the read-out frequency of the buffer storage unit differ by a defined factor, and the buffer storage unit is in the form of a ring buffer with a number of read-in pointers and/or a number of read-out pointers which designate the data to be read into and out of the individual storage segments of the ring buffer. The data which are read out from storage segments indicated by the number of read-out pointers are superimposed (added).
In accordance with the invention a buffer storage unit is provided which shifts or transposes a defined frequency region into another frequency region. The buffer storage unit has individual storage segments for data representing audio content, and the read-in and read-out frequencies of the buffer storage unit differ by a defined factor. A sound signal lying in a region which is no longer (or poorly) detectable by the hearing impaired person is thus shifted into a frequency region which is better detectable by this person, particularly a lower region. Thus, the hearing impaired person can detect the audio content despite the original audio signal being a high-frequency signal.
The read-in and read-out frequency preferably have a rational relation to one another. This results from a corresponding defining of the read-in and read-out frequency. For example, the ratio of read-in to read-out frequency can be 3/2, the input frequency thereby being reduced to the output frequency by 3/2.
The shifting of the frequency region preferably occurs by one or more octave steps. A tonal distortion or disturbance of the audio signal thus is counteracted.
In an embodiment the data representing audio content is temporarily stored in the buffer storage unit for a time period of 28 ms at the most preferably 25 ms, since a degradation of the speech intelligibility would otherwise result. This temporarily stored time period corresponds to the time period for which the data remains in the buffer storage unit between the respective read-in and read-out. A longer temporarily stored time period would produce an echo between the read-in and the read-out which would reduce the speech intelligibility.
In a further embodiment a high-pass filter is connected upstream of the buffer storage unit, since lower disturbance effects occur, given the selection of higher frequencies in the region of the buffer storage unit. The filtering out of the low frequencies has the advantage that the bounces arising in the region of the read-in and read-out remain small.
A frequency shift for different frequency bands in the allocated buffer storage unit can occur in a band-selective fashion. For example, in one frequency region, a shift of one octave is performed; in another frequency region, a shift of only half an octave is performed. It is thereby achieved that the more detectable or less detectable frequency region is shifted into the optimal frequency region for the hearing impaired person.
To minimize disturbances in the frequency shift, preferably a read-in and read-out occur at locations of equal signal amplitude. In this way, negative influences due to signal jumps are avoided.
In another embodiment two buffer storage units can be provided which are connected in parallel, for example, wherein one buffer storage is first written (filled) to capacity and analyzed, and the other buffer storage unit is then controlled, such that the read-in and read-out take place at locations of equal signal amplitude. Locations of equal signal amplitude are, for example, the zero crossings or locations of the sound wave having the same first derivative.
An advantageous signal processing can also be accompanied by superimposition of the shifted frequency region with the base signal. Thus, the frequency shift described above is used in the signal processing in a hearing aid merely in a supporting fashion, wherein the base signal is maintained. To the extent that this signal is mixed into the original signal, the shift should merely be performed by one octave or by octave steps, since degradation of the speech intelligibility could otherwise result.
The buffer storage unit can be constructed as a ring buffer. The ring buffer can have read-in and read-out pointers, wherein the frequency shift is defined by the ratio of the number of read-in pointers to read-out pointers. Thus, data are not lost in the ring buffer, since all the data which flow into the ring buffer via the read-in pointers are emitted again via the read-out pointers. Moreover, it is possible to perform an exact frequency adjustment by the number of read-in and read-out pointers.
Finally, an interface for an external programming unit can be attached to the hearing aid in order to perform a seated configuration of the hearing aid and to enter the input and output speeds. To this end, a control unit is connected in the hearing aid to the interface and is connected directly with the ring buffer.
With the entered settings, the control unit thus controls the mode of operation of the ring buffer. With the aid of this arrangement it is thus possible to flexibly adjust the operation of the ring buffer.
It is also possible to connect a storage unit in the hearing aid between the control unit and the interface, this storage unit storing the settings entered via the external programming unit and forwarding these settings, as needed, to the control unit.
A second possibility of frequency shift operates on the basis of Fourier transformation, which creates a shifting of spectral lines with equidistant frequency spacings. In such a transformation, all spectral lines are separated by 400 Hz from each other, for example.
Preferably, the Fourier transformation is a discrete Fourier transformation, or fast Fourier transformatio

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