DK1196009T3 - Hearing aid with adaptive matching of input transducers - Google Patents

Hearing aid with adaptive matching of input transducers Download PDF

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Publication number
DK1196009T3
DK1196009T3 DK01610048.9T DK01610048T DK1196009T3 DK 1196009 T3 DK1196009 T3 DK 1196009T3 DK 01610048 T DK01610048 T DK 01610048T DK 1196009 T3 DK1196009 T3 DK 1196009T3
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Denmark
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signal
signals
hearing aid
input
processor
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DK01610048.9T
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Danish (da)
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Lars Baekgaard Jensen
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Widex As
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R25/00Deaf-aid sets, i.e. electro-acoustic or electro-mechanical hearing aids; Electric tinnitus maskers providing an auditory perception
    • H04R25/40Arrangements for obtaining a desired directivity characteristic
    • H04R25/407Circuits for combining signals of a plurality of transducers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R29/00Monitoring arrangements; Testing arrangements
    • H04R29/004Monitoring arrangements; Testing arrangements for microphones
    • H04R29/005Microphone arrays
    • H04R29/006Microphone matching
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R2410/00Microphones
    • H04R2410/07Mechanical or electrical reduction of wind noise generated by wind passing a microphone

Description

DESCRIPTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a hearing aid with a directional characteristic, comprising at least two spaced apart input transducers.
[0002] Hearing aids comprising two input transducers and having a directional characteristic are well known in the art. A sound wave that impinges on a hearing aid of this type at a specific angle is received by the two input transducers with an arrival time difference defined by the distance between the input transducers, the velocity of sound, and the impinging angle. The output signals of the two input transducers are combined to form the directional characteristic of the hearing aid. When the output signal of the input transducer receiving the sound wave first is delayed by an amount that is equal to the arrival time difference of the corresponding sound wave and subtracted from the output signal of the other input transducer, the two output signals will cancel each other. Thus, a notch is created in the directional characteristic of the hearing aid at the receiving angle in question. By adjusting the delay of the input transducer signal before subtraction, the angular position of the notch in the directional characteristic may be adjusted correspondingly.
[0003] It is also well known that the frequency response of subtracted signals originating from a sound source in the surroundings of the hearing aid, i.e. the transducer signals are correlated signals, has a 6 dB/octave positive slope. Thus, low frequencies are attenuated for correlated signals while this is not the case for non-correlated signals, i.e. neither transducer noise nor wind noise is attenuated. Therefore, the signal to noise ratio is reduced in a prior art directional hearing aid compared to an omnidirectional hearing aid.
[0004] Notch formation requires that the two input transducers are identical, i.e. they have identical parameters, such as sensitivities and phase responses. Typically, identically manufactured input transducers exhibit sensitivity differences of the order of 6 dB and phase differences of the order of 10°. Directional characteristics can not be formed with input transducers with phase and sensitivity differences of this magnitude. Selection of paired input transducers may reduce the sensitivity differences to 0.5 dB and phase differences to 2° which may still not lead to notch formation in the directional characteristic. Further, ageing may increase these differences over time.
[0005] In WO 01/10169, a hearing aid with adaptive matching of input transducers is disclosed. According to the disclosure, differences in sensitivity and phase response are compensated utilising specific circuitry continuously determining the differences and compensating for them. The differences are determined based on the sound signals received by the input transducers. No additional signals are needed. Selection of input transducers is eliminated and differences between circuitry processing each of the respective input transducer signals and differences created by ageing or other influences are automatically compensated. In US4956867, an adaptive noise cancelling signal processing method is described, which can be used in hearing aids. The crosscorrelation of the input signals is calculated and used in the signal processing method.
[0006] In a hearing aid with a plurality of input transducers, the output signals from the respective input transducers may not be generated from the same sound source. For example, when the hearing aid is operated in a silent environment, each of the input transducer signals contains only noise generated by the respective input transducer itself. Thus, in this case, the output signals are generated by independent and thus, non-correlated signal sources, namely the individual input transducers. Likewise, signals generated by the two input transducers in response to wind, i.e. wind noise, are not correlated since air flow at the hearing aid is turbulent. Thus, also in this case, the output signals are generated by independent signal sources. Further, the input transducer signals are clipped at high input levels by the A/D converters converting the input transducer signals to digital signals. Typically, signals are clipped at different signal levels because of different input transducer sensitivities and, thus, clipped signals may also be non-correlated and appear to have been generated by independent signal sources.
[0007] When the input transducer signals are generated by independent signal sources, the above-mentioned prior art input transducer matching technique falls apart since, typically, the determined phase and sensitivity differences will be dominated by differences in the generated signals and will not be related to differences in input transducer parameters.
[0008] It is an object of the present invention to provide a hearing aid with a directional characteristic that overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the prior art.
[0009] This object is fulfilled by a hearing aid with a directional characteristic wherein transducer signal type, such as transducer noise, wind noise, sound emitted from a sound source located in the surroundings of the hearing aid, distorted signals, such as clipped signals, slew rate limited signals, etc, etc, is determined, and wherein signal processing in the hearing aid, such as transducer matching, filtering, signal combination, etc, is adapted according to the determined signal type. For example, the directional characteristic may be switched to an omnidirectional characteristic when at least one of the input transducer signals is dominated by noise or distortion, and/or adaptive matching of input transducers may be put on hold while at least one of the input transducer signals is dominated by noise or distortion.
[0010] Thus, the above-mentioned and other objects are fulfilled by a hearing aid comprising a first and a second input transducer for transforming an acoustic input signal into respective first and second input transducer signals, a first signal processor having a first input that is connected to the first input transducer signal and a second input that is connected to the second input transducer signal for generation of a third electrical signal by processing and combining the input signals, an output transducer for transforming the third electrical signal into an acoustic output signal, a correlation detector for detection of non-correlated first and second processor input signals and for generation of one or more control signals including a first control signal in response to the detection so that transducer signal processing can be adapted according to the detection.
[0011] The hearing aid comprises an adaptive matching circuit with first and second inputs that are connected with the respective first and second input transducer signals and first and second outputs that are connected to the respective first and second processor inputs for modification of amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals in response to determinations of difference in the amplitude and phase responses so that the resulting amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals are adjusted to be substantially identical, and wherein the correlation detector generates a second control signal that is connected to the adaptive matching circuit for inhibition of adaptive matching upon detection of non-correlated signals.
[0012] The first and second control signals may be identical signals.
[0013] In a hearing aid according to the present invention, transducer differences, such as differences in sensitivities, phase responses, etc, are continuously determined when the transducer signals are correlated, e.g. when the transducer signals are generated in response to a sound source located in the surroundings of the hearing aid so that in this case the hearing aid continuously adapts to changes in transducer parameters. When non-correlated signals are detected, e.g. when the transducer signals are dominated by non-correlated signals, such as when at least one transducer signal is dominated by, e.g. transducer noise, wind noise, signal clipping, etc, updating of determined values of differences in transducer parameters is not performed rather, for example, the transducer parameter compensating circuitry remains set according to the latest updated values of the differences.
[0014] The correlation detector may comprise one or more signal level detectors for detection of respective input transducer signal levels. For example, the first and the second control outputs may be set to a logic "1" when the detected signal level is greater than a predetermined threshold level such as 2 dB below the saturation level of the A/D converters for converting the input transducer signals to digital signals. The first and the second control outputs may be reset to a logic "0" when the detected signal levels return to values below the predetermined thresholds. The level detector may further have hysteresis so that the control outputs may be set when the detected signal level is above a first predetermined threshold level and reset when the detected signal level returns to a value below a second predetermined threshold level that is lower than the first threshold level.
[0015] The signal level may be an amplitude level, a root mean square level, a power level, etc, or the ratio between such levels and a corresponding reference quantity, e.g. in dB. Further, the level may be determined within a specific frequency range.
[0016] The signal level detectors may further comprise slew rate detectors for detection of rapid signal changes since slew rate limitations of circuitry that processes input transducer signals may distort these signals. The signal level detector may for example comprise a slew rate threshold so that the first control output is set e.g. to logic "1" if an increase in absolute value of the difference between one sample and the next is greater than or equal to the slew rate threshold.
[0017] Typically, wind noise generates transducer signals at very high levels even at low wind speeds thus, wind noise will typically be detected utilising a signal level detector as described above.
[0018] The hearing aid may further comprise a frequency analyser for determination of the frequency content of input transducer signals, e.g. for discrimination between signal type. For example, wind noise and clipped signals may be distinguished based on their frequency content, and signal processing may be adapted accordingly.
[0019] Further, the signal level detectors may be used for detection of the level of a noise signal whereby wind noise may be distinguished from transducer noise since, typically, transducer noise is a low level signal while wind noise is a high level signal.
[0020] Thus, according to the present invention, at least three types of signals may be identified, i.e. transducer noise signals, wind noise signals, and signals from sound sources located in the surroundings of the hearing aid. Further, distorted signal types, such as clipped signals, slew rate limited signals, etc, may be identified.
[0021] As already mentioned, transducer signals dominated by transducer noise, wind noise, and/or signal distortion are not correlated since the signal sources are substantially independent of each other. The opposite is true for transducer signals generated in response to a specific sound source located in the surroundings of the hearing aid. Such signals differ only by the arrival time difference caused by the distance between the transducers and by differences caused by transducer differences, i.e. such signals are highly correlated. Thus, signals of this type may be distinguished by calculation of cross-correlation values of input transducer signals.
[0022] According to an embodiment of the present invention, the correlation detector comprises a second signal processor that is adapted to calculate a cross-correlation value of signals derived from the transducer signals. Output transducer signals with a cross-correlation value within a predetermined range of cross-correlation values are treated as correlated signals.
[0023] For example, a cross-correlation value ro may be calculated as an approximation to or an estimate of a value r defined by the following equation:
wherein X is a sampled signal derived from the first signal, Y is a sampled signal derived from the second signal, and N is the number of samples.
[0024] It is noted that r ranges from -1 to 1 and that r = 1 for identical signals Xand Y and r = -1 for inverted signals Xand Y and r = 0 for signals with no mutual correlation.
[0025] It is also noted that the equation is simplified for signals having DC-values equal to zero, i.e. ΣΧ = 0 and ΣΥ = 0 in the equation.
[0026] In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the correlation value ro is calculated from a particularly simple approximation to the equation wherein the signals X and Y are digitised in one bit words, i.e. the sign of the signals X and Y are inserted in the equation.
[0027] It is even more preferred to calculate the correlation value ro as a running mean value wherein a predetermined value Δ-| is added to the sum when sign(X) = sign (Y) and wherein a predetermined value Δ2 is added to the sum when sign(X) Φ sign (Y). If, for example, Δ1 = 1, and Δ2 = 0, r increases towards the value 1 when X and Y have identical signs, and r decreases towards Ά when X and Y have opposite signs. Since non-correlated signals, such as transducer noise or wind noise, change sign independently of each other and thus, will have identical signs half the time while signals generated in response to a specific sound source are highly correlated and have the same sign substantially all the time.
[0028] In an embodiment of the invention, the first signal processor is adapted to process the first and second electrical signals for formation of an omnidirectional characteristic upon detection of non-correlated signals, e.g. by signal level detection, by crosscorrelation calculation, etc. The omnidirectional characteristic may be formed by selecting the first or the second electrical signal as the third electrical signal whereby signal to noise ration is improved compared to a directional characteristic, or, the omnidirectional characteristic may be formed by averaging the first and second electrical signals whereby signal to noise ratio may be further improved and clipping or slew rate distortion reduced if, for example, only one of the signals is clipped or slew rate limited.
[0029] Still other objects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following description wherein the invention will be explained in greater detail. By way of example, there is shown and described a preferred embodiment of this invention. As will be realised, the invention is capable of other different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modification in various, obvious aspects all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and descriptions will be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive. In the drawing:
Fig. 1 shows a blocked schematic of a hearing aid according to the present invention,
Fig. 2 shows a blocked schematic of a second signal processor according to the present invention,
Fig. 3 shows a blocked schematic of a level detector, and
Fig. 4 shows a blocked schematic of input circuitry of the first signal processor.
[0030] It will be obvious for the person skilled in the art that the circuits shown in the drawing may be realised using digital or analogue circuitry or any combination hereof. In the present embodiment, digital signal processing is employed and thus, the signal processing circuits comprise digital signal processing circuits. For simplicity, the A/D and D/A converters are not shown in the drawing. In the present embodiment, all the digital circuitry of the hearing aid may be provided on a single digital signal processing chip or, the circuitry may be distributed on a plurality of integrated circuit chips in any appropriate way.
[0031] Fig. 1 shows a blocked schematic of a hearing aid 10 comprising a first input transducer 12 and a second input transducer 14 for transforming an acoustic input signal into respective first and second input transducer signals 16, 18. The input transducer signals 16, 18 are converted to digital signals by A/D converters (not shown). A first signal processor 20 has a first input 22 that is connected to the first input transducer signal 16 and a second input 24 that is connected to the second input transducer signal 18 via an adaptive matching circuit 26. The processor 20 processes and combines the processor input signals 28, 30 for generation of a third electrical signal 32. An output transducer 34 transforms the third electrical signal 32 into an acoustic output signal.
[0032] The adaptive matching circuit 26 has first and second inputs 36, 38 that are connected with the respective first and second input transducer signals 16, 18 and first and second outputs 40, 42 that are connected to the respective first and second processor inputs 22, 24. The circuit 26 modifies amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals 28, 30 in response to determinations of differences in the amplitude and phase responses so that the amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals 28, 30 are adjusted to be substantially identical.
[0033] A correlation detector 44 is connected to the input transducer signals 16, 18 and detects presence of non-correlated signals and generates first and second control signals 46, 48 in response to the detection so that signal processing in the hearing aid can be adapted according to the detection.
[0034] The first control signal 46 is connected to the first signal processor 20 for controlling the way in which the first signal processor combines the first and second processor input signals 28, 30 , e.g. by combining the first and second processor input signals 28, 30 for omnidirectional sound reception upon detection of non-correlated transducer signals.
[0035] The second control signal 48 is connected to the adaptive matching circuit 26 for inhibition of adaptive matching upon detection of non-correlated signals.
[0036] The adaptive matching circuit 26 has an inverter 50 connected in series with an adjustable gain amplifier 52 that is connected in series with an adjustable delay 54. The nominal delay of adjustable delay 54 equals the distance between the first and second input transducer 12, 14 divided by the velocity of sound so that, nominally, the directional characteristic of the hearing aid contains a notch in the direction of a line extending from the first input transducer 12 to the second input transducer 14. A matching controller 37 determines differences in amplitude and phase of the input transducer signals 16, 18 and adjusts the amplifier 52 and the delay 54 in response to the determinations so that the amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals 28, 30 are adjusted to be substantially identical.
[0037] Fig. 2 shows a blocked schematic of a second signal processor 100 according to the present invention and included in the correlation detector 44 wherein the correlation value r is calculated as a running mean value. The signals X, Y may be the input transducer signals 16, 18 or band pass filtered versions of the signals 16, 18. The signals X, Y are input to sign blocks 110, 120 that output sign (X) and sign (Y), respectively, to the comparator 130 and if sign(X) = sign (Y) a predetermined value Aq = 1 is added to the sum in adder 160 and if sign(X) Φ sign (Y), Δ2 = 0 is added to the sum in adder 160. The low pass filter 170 averages the sum output from the adder 160 in an appropriate time interval, such as 10 ms. If Aq = 1 and Δ2 = -1, a closer approximation to r is obtained by the running mean value.
[0038] Fig. 3 shows a blocked schematic of a signal level detector 200 included in the correlation detector 44, comprising a first signal level detector 202 that is connected to the first input transducer signal 16 and a second signal level detector 204 that is connected to the second input transducer signal 18. The level detector 200 sets a control output 46 to a logic "1" if one of the processor input signals 28, 30 is more than approximately 2.5 dB from the saturation level (clipping level) of the A/D converters (not shown). In the present embodiment, the A/D converters are sigma delta converters having a slew rate of 0.5 for successive samples (theoretical limit: ±1). Therefore, the control output 46 is also set to a logic "1" if the increase in absolute value of the difference between one sample and the next is 0.375 or higher.
[0039] Fig. 4 shows an input circuit 400 of the first signal processor 20. When the control signal 46 is a logic "1", the counter 402 is incremented from 0 to one in 32 clock cycles, i.e. in 1 ms, and when the control signal 46 goes low, the counter 402 is decremented form one to 0 in 512 clock cycles, i.e. in 16 ms. The person skilled in the art will appreciate that the modified signals 28', 30' are identical to the respective processor input signals 28, 30 when the counter output signal 404 is logic "0", and in general that: signal 28’ = signal 28 + counter output 404 ('^(signal 28 + signal 30) - signal 28), , and signal 30’ = signal 30 + counter output 404 (‘/2(signal 28 + signal 30) z' - signal 30), , whereby a smooth transition from a directional characteristic to an omnidirectional characteristic and vice versa is obtained. In the first signal processor 20, the signals 28', 30' are summed into the third electrical signal 32. It will be appreciated that when the counter output 404 is equal to 1, the circuitry 406 simulates that an acoustic signal corresponding to the average of signals 28, 30 impinges on the hearing aid from a frontal direction whereby an omnidirectional characteristic is obtained.
[0040] In an alternative embodiment, the directional characteristic of the hearing aid is controlled by adjustment of an attenuation control parameter as disclosed in WO 01/01731.
REFERENCES CITED IN THE DESCRIPTION
This list of references cited by the applicant is for the reader's convenience only. It does not form part of the European patent document. Even though great care has been taken in compiling the references, errors or omissions cannot be excluded and the EPO disclaims all liability in this regard.
Patent documents cited in the description • US4956867A 100051 • WQ0101731A [00401

Claims (10)

1. Høreapparat (10) omfattende en første og en anden input-transducer (12, 14) til at transformere et akustisk input-signal til respektive første og andet input-transducersignaler (16, 18), idet en første signalprocessor (20) har et første processor-input (22) og et andet processor-input (24) og indrettet til dannelse af et tredje elektrisk signal (32) ved at bearbejde og kombinere signalerne modtaget ved det første og det andet processor-input, en output-transducer til at transformere det tredje elektriske signal til et akustisk output-signal, et adaptivt matching-kredsløb (26) med første og andet input (36, 38), der er forbundet for at modtage det første og det andet input-transducersignal (16, 18), og første og andet output (40, 42), der er forbundet med de respektive første og andet processor-inputs (22, 24), til modifikation af amplitude- og faseresponserne fra det første og andet output-signal (28, 30) som respons på bestemmelse af forskel i amplitude- og faseresponserne således at amplitude- og faseresponserne fra de første og andet output-signaler (28, 30) i det væsentlige er identiske, kendetegnet ved at det omfatter en korrelationsdetektor (44) til detektion af ikke-korrelerede første og andet input-transducersignaler og til dannelse af et første kontrolsignal som respons på detektionen således at signalbearbejdning i høreapparatet kan indrettes i overensstemmelse med detektionen, og til dannelse af et andet kontrolsignal (48) der er forbundet med det adaptive matching-kredsløb (26) til blokering af adaptiv matching ved detektion af ikke-korrelerede signaler.A hearing aid (10) comprising a first and a second input transducer (12, 14) for transforming an acoustic input signal into respective first and second input transducer signals (16, 18), a first signal processor (20) having a first processor input (22) and a second processor input (24) and arranged to generate a third electrical signal (32) by processing and combining the signals received at the first and second processor inputs, an output transducer transforming the third electrical signal into an acoustic output signal, an adaptive matching circuit (26) with first and second inputs (36, 38) connected to receive the first and second input transducer signals (16, 18), and first and second outputs (40, 42) connected to the respective first and second processor inputs (22, 24) for modifying the amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals (28, 30) in response to determining difference in amplitude and phase response so that the amplitude and phase responses of the first and second output signals (28, 30) are substantially identical, characterized in that it comprises a correlation detector (44) for detecting uncorrelated first and second input transducer signals and for generating a first control signal in response to the detection so that signal processing in the hearing aid can be arranged in accordance with the detection, and to generate a second control signal (48) associated with the adaptive matching circuit (26) to block adaptive matching by detection of non-correlated signals. 2. Høreapparat ifølge krav 1, hvor korrelationsdetektoren (44) omfatter en første signalniveaudetektor (202) til detektion af første signalniveauer.Hearing aid according to claim 1, wherein the correlation detector (44) comprises a first signal level detector (202) for detecting first signal levels. 3. Høreapparat ifølge krav 1, hvor korrelationsdetektoren (44) endvidere omfatter en anden signalniveaudetektor (204) til detektion afanden signalniveauer.Hearing aid according to claim 1, wherein the correlation detector (44) further comprises a second signal level detector (204) for detecting other signal levels. 4. Høreapparat ifølge et hvilket som helst af kravene, hvor korrelationsdetektoren (44) omfatter en anden signalprocessor (100) der er indrettet til at beregne en kryds-korrelationsværdi af signaler udledt af de første og anden signaler.Hearing aid according to any of the claims, wherein the correlation detector (44) comprises a second signal processor (100) adapted to calculate a cross-correlation value of signals derived from the first and second signals. 5. Høreapparat ifølge et hvilket som helst af kravene, hvor det første kontrolsignal (46) er forbundet med den første signalprocessor (20) til at styre måden hvorpå den første signalprocessor kombinerer de første og anden processor-inputsignaler.Hearing aid according to any of the claims, wherein the first control signal (46) is connected to the first signal processor (20) to control the way the first signal processor combines the first and second processor input signals. 6. Høreapparat ifølge krav 5, hvor den første signalprocessor (20) kombinerer de første og anden processor-inputsignaler til omnidirektionel lydmodtagelse.The hearing aid of claim 5, wherein the first signal processor (20) combines the first and second processor input signals for omnidirectional audio reception. 7. Høreapparat ifølge et hvilket som helst af kravene 4-6, hvor den anden processor (100) er indrettet til at beregne kryds-korrelationsværdien ro som en approksimering af eller et estimat af en værdi r defineret ved følgende ligning:Hearing aid according to any one of claims 4-6, wherein the second processor (100) is adapted to calculate the cross-correlation value ro as an approximation or estimate of a value r defined by the following equation: hvor X er et udvalgt signal afledt af det første signal, Y er et udvalgt signal afledt af det andet signal, og N er antallet af prøver.where X is a selected signal derived from the first signal, Y is a selected signal derived from the second signal, and N is the number of samples. 8. Høreapparat ifølge krav 7, hvor signalerne X og Y digitaliseres i en bit ord.Hearing aid according to claim 7, wherein the signals X and Y are digitized in one bit. 9. Høreapparat ifølge krav 7, hvor korrelationsværdien ro beregnes som en løbende sum hvor en forudbestemt værdi Δι lægges til summen når tegn(X) = tegn (Y) og hvor en forudbestemt værdi Δ2 lægges til summen når tegn(X) φ tegn (Y)·Hearing aid according to claim 7, wherein the correlation value ro is calculated as a continuous sum where a predetermined value Δι is added to the sum when character (X) = character (Y) and wherein a predetermined value Δ2 is added to the sum when character (X) φ character ( Y) · 10. Høreapparat ifølge krav 9, hvor Δι er lig med en og Δ2 er lig med nul.Hearing aid according to claim 9, wherein Δι equals one and Δ2 equals zero.
DK01610048.9T 2000-10-04 2001-05-10 Hearing aid with adaptive matching of input transducers DK1196009T3 (en)

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AU2003206666A1 (en) 2002-01-12 2003-07-24 Oticon A/S Wind noise insensitive hearing aid
US7082204B2 (en) 2002-07-15 2006-07-25 Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Ab Electronic devices, methods of operating the same, and computer program products for detecting noise in a signal based on a combination of spatial correlation and time correlation
ATE429787T1 (en) 2003-05-19 2009-05-15 Widex As HEARING AID
DE102005032292B3 (en) 2005-07-11 2006-09-21 Siemens Audiologische Technik Gmbh Hearing aid for directional hearing has noise detection device to detect noise level of microphones whereby two noise levels can be compared with one another and appropriate control pulse can be displayed at microphone device
US7472041B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2008-12-30 Step Communications Corporation Method and apparatus for accommodating device and/or signal mismatch in a sensor array
EP1827058A1 (en) * 2006-02-22 2007-08-29 Oticon A/S Hearing device providing smooth transition between operational modes of a hearing aid
JP4860709B2 (en) * 2006-03-03 2012-01-25 ヴェーデクス・アクティーセルスカプ Hearing aids and methods of using gain limits in hearing aids
WO2010140358A1 (en) * 2009-06-02 2010-12-09 パナソニック株式会社 Hearing aid, hearing assistance system, walking detection method, and hearing assistance method

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DK170600B1 (en) * 1992-03-31 1995-11-06 Gn Danavox As Hearing aid with compensation for acoustic feedback
JPH06233389A (en) * 1993-02-05 1994-08-19 Sony Corp Hearing aid
EP1017253B1 (en) * 1998-12-30 2012-10-31 Siemens Corporation Blind source separation for hearing aids

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