Brian Strope


A Novel Hearing Aid Design

A new structure compensates for the frequency-dependent loudness recruitment (a product of limited dynamic range which may vary with frequency) of sensorineural hearing loss by mixing the impulse responses from maximum and minimum filter corrections as a function of the total input level.

Unlike commonly-used linear hearing aids, the new structure amplifies quiet sounds that would have been below threshold, while leaving loud signals largely unchanged. Unlike wide-band compression systems, the proposed structure compensates frequency-dependent loss of dynamic range with far less complexity (and less potential dynamic distortion) than multi-channel compression designs. Our goal is to ensure audibility with as little modification of the dynamic detail of speech as possible.


Publications

  • 1995 ICASSP: abstract, article, and poster.

  • [UCLA] [EE] [SPAPL] [bps] [research]
    bps@ucla.edu