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| United States Patent | 5214709 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5214709.html |
| Inventor(s) | Ribic; Zlatan (Vienna, AT) |
| Abstract | Hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing faculty, including a
directional microphone whose pick-up characteristic can be altered, the
pick-up characteristic being automatically controlled as a function of the
input or output signal in such a way that all possible microphone
characteristics may be set, and this is realized in that the directional
microphone (10) is an electret microphone and that the changes in the
pick-up characteristic take place electrically and continuously. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5214709 |
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Hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing faculty |
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| Publication Date |
May 25, 1993 |
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| Priority Data |
Jul 13, 1990[AT]1500/90 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| Market Size |
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Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
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| Market Share |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A hearing aid for persons with an impaired having faculty comprising:
a directional microphone system with pick-up characteristics that are
continuously and electrically variable, said microphone includes:
i. an inverter having an input and an output;
ii. a current-controlled attenuator controlled by said input of said
inverter and connected to said inverter output;
iii. two omni-directional electret microphones each having an input opening
for receiving the sound to be heard and for producing an output signal in
response to the sound, the input openings being spaced apart from each
other, and wherein one microphone output is connected to said inverter so
that its output voltage is inverted and attenuated; and
iv. means for adding the other microphone output voltage with the inverted
and attenuated voltage to produce an output signal of the hearing aid
having automatically changeable characteristics.
2. The hearing aid as claimed in claim 1, additionally including a housing
in which said two omni-directional electret microphones are located.
3. The hearing aid as claimed in claim 1, additionally including means for
attenuating the sound to be heard located within one of the input
openings, for varying the pickup characteristics of said microphone.
4. The hearing aid as claimed in claim 1, additionally including means for
delaying the sound to be heard located in one of the input openings, for
varying the pick-up characteristics of said microphone.
5. A hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing faculty comprising:
a directional microphone system with pick-up characteristics that are
continuously and electrically variable, said microphone includes:
i. an inverter having an input and output;
ii. a current-controlled attenuator controlled by an output signal of the
hearing aid and connected to said inverter output;
iii. two omni-directional electret microphones each having an input opening
for receiving the sound to be heard and for producing an output signal in
response to the sound, the input openings being spaced apart from each
other, and wherein one microphone output is connected to said inverter so
that its output voltage is inverted and attenuated; and
iv. means for adding the other microphone output voltage with the inverted
and attenuated voltage to produce an output signal of the hearing aid
having automatically changeable characteristics.
6. A hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing faculty comprising:
a directional microphone system with pick-up characteristics that are
continuously and electrically variable, said microphone includes:
i. an inverter having an input and an output;
ii. a voltage-controlled attenuator controlled by said input of said
inverter and connected to said inverter output;
iii. two omni-directional electret microphones each having an input opening
for receiving the sound to be heard and for producing an output signal in
response to the sound, the input openings being spaced apart from each
other, and wherein one microphone output is connected to said inverter so
that its output voltage is inverted and attenuated; and
iv. means for adding the other microphone output voltage with the inverted
and attenuated voltage to produce an output signal of the hearing aid
having automatically changeable characteristics.
7. A hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing faculty comprising:
a directional microphone system with pick-up characteristics that are
continuously and electrically variable, said microphone includes:
i. an inverter having an input and an output;
ii. a voltage-controlled attenuator controlled by an output signal of the
hearing aid and connected to said inverter output;
iii. two omni-directional electret microphones each having an input opening
for receiving the sound to be heard and for producing an output signal in
response to the sound, the input openings being spaced apart from each
other, and wherein one microphone output is connected to said inverter so
that its output voltage is inverted and attenuated; and
iv. means for adding the other microphone output voltage with the inverted
and attenuated voltage to produce an output signal of the hearing aid
having automatically changeable characteristics. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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The invention relates to a hearing aid for persons with an impaired hearing
faculty, said hearing aid comprising a directional microphone whose
pick-up characteristic can be changed.
Practically all current hearing aids are provided with one of either two
possible types of microphones.
One type is the so-called pressure microphone that transforms air pressure
into electrical voltage, the other is the so-called pressure gradient
microphone, whereby the air pressure gradient serves as the reference
value.
As the air pressure in one point is not a vector, but a scalar quantity,
the pressure microphone picks up the sound independent of the direction of
incidence as long as its dimension are small relative to the wavelength.
The pressure microphone therefore has a so-called omnidirectional
characteristic.
In contrast to this, the pressure gradient microphone picks up the sound at
two points, whereby the difference in pressure is picked up at these two
points. It is quite typical for this sort of microphones that, when
regarded in a plane, the pick-up characteristic resembles the digit 8.
This type of pick-up characteristic is therefore also called
"bidirectional characteristic". Due to the fact that the pressure gradient
depends on the frequency, pressure gradient microphones tend to transmit
low frequencies less strongly than high frequencies, that is to say with a
slope of +6 dB/octave. It is possible and well known to build in
attenuating and delay elements in one of the two sound inputs, thus
enabling intermediate stages ranging from bidirectional characterstics to
near omnidirectional characteristics (e.g. cardioid characteristic). If
the sound input opening of a pressure gradient microphone is closed
completely, it acts like a normal pressure microphone with an
omnidirectional characteristic.
As a rule, present hearing aids are equipped with either a normal pressure
microphone or a directional microphone (pressure gradient microphone).
Directional microphones are ideal for a noisy environment, but one must,
however, accept the disadvantages of bass suppression and audible noise
background in a quiet environment. Pressure microphones show good results
in a quiet environment, but not in a noisy one. It has therefore been
tried to compensate these disadvantages by combining both types of
microphones.
A hearing aid is known that comprises a kind of mechanical valve for
manually closing the sound input opening. Apart from constructional
problems concerning this type of switching the pick-up characteristic, the
person with the impaired hearing faculty often has difficulties in
recognizing which characteristic would be the best in a given situation.
It is the object of the present invention to create a hearing aid that
avoids the disadvantages of common hearing aids as was mentioned above,
whereby the pick-up characteristic is automatically controlled as a
function of the input or output signal in such a manner that all possible
characteristics may be set between bidirectional and omnidirectional.
In accordance with the invention this task is fulfilled in the hearing aid
of the type as mentioned above in that the directional microphone is an
electret microphone and that the change in the pick-up characteristic
takes place electrically and continuously.
This leads to the advantage that in a noisy environment low frequencies are
suppressed, and that the microphone comprises a bidirectional
characteristic (e.g. cardioid). In a quiet environment, however, the
microphone becomes a pressure capsule, i.e. it is linear and comprises an
omnidirectional characteristic.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention it is provided that
the directional microphone is formed by two pressure systems whose sound
input openings are to be found separated apart, whereby the output voltage
of the one microphone is inverted and added to the output voltage of the
other microphone via an attenuator, and that in this manner &he function
of a pressure gradient microphone is simulated.
In the event of loud signals the low-frequency suppression seems like an
ASP ("Automatic Signal Processing") and thus improves speech recognition.
In addition, the pick-up characteristic suppresses distortive sound from
undesirable sources. In a quiet environment the reproduction is given a
large amount of bass and is thus pleasant to hear. The microphone then
picks up sound from all directions.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention it is provided that
the controllable attenuator is manually adjustable. This allows the user
to influence the device.
In accordance with the invention it is further provided that the
controllable attenuator is arranged as a current- or voltage-controlled
attenuator whose controller output is the input or output signal of the
hearing aid, and that the two individual microphones are replaced by a
double membrane system in one casing.
A common pressure capsule comprises a membrane that is connected with the
surrounding air on its one side and with a closed chamber on its other
side. Therefore, the deflection of the membrane only depends on the
momentary pressure exerted by the surrounding air. A pressure gradient
capsule, on the other hand, only consists of a membrane connected on both
sides with the surrounding air and must therefore be regarded as a system
with two inputs. Each side of the membrane is equivalent to an input,
whereby the membrane deflection is controlled by the difference in
pressure between the two inputs.
A gradient effect can be artificially achieved by using two pressure
capsules. When the two pressure capsules are spaced apart, they pick up
the pressure at two points, i.e. at the position where the inputs of the
capsules are located. The two electric signals provide an image of the two
pressure values.
The invention is now outlined in closer detail by way of a preferred
embodiment by reference to the enclosed drawings, in which:
FIGS. 1a and 1b show a circuit diagram of the hearing aid in accordance
with the invention.
FIG. 2 shows a sectional view providing the arrangement of another
preferred embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 1a and 1b show an arrangement with two pressure capsules Mil 1 and Mi2
2. With the help of the inverter 3 it is possible to invert the phase of a
signal and to add both signals in a summing amplifier 4. By means of this
process only the difference between the two signals is transmitted to
output 5 of the circuit. Thus a typical gradient effect is achieved. If
the microphone signal of Mi2 is continuously attenuated by means of
attenuator 6, the transmission towards Mil changes, i.e. towards an
omnidirectional characteristic. Attenuator 6 may, for example, be a
voltage-controlled attenuator (VCA) that receives its control signal
directly from one of the two microphones via a variable-gain amplifier and
rectifier 7 ("input controlled") as shown in FIG. 1a from the the output 8
(output stage) of the hearing aid ("output controlled") as shown in FIG.
1b.
Because of lack of space and high costs it is not very advisable to build
two mechanically separated microphones into a hearing aid.
A more elegant solution is the two-membrane system in accordance with the
invention, as is schematically displayed in FIG. 2. In principle, two
pressure capsules connected to one another in a casing 10 are arranged,
said capsules having separate inputs and outputs. The rear volumes 11, 12
are connected to one another via holes 13, 14 in the counter electrodes El
and E2 15, 16 and an acoustic resistor 17 provided between said volumes.
Il is the sound input opening 18 of the main system Ml (directed forward).
The sound input opening 12 of the second system may be arranged on the
opposite slim side 19 and may consist of a hole in the lid with a nozzle
20 or, for a deflector 21 whose interior may, for include an element 22
for attenuating and/or delaying the sound, for example. "P" is a substrate
23 that is provided for contact purposes on the outer side and that may
comprise a FET amplifier for both systems.
Said capsule has the same properties as the system mentioned above that
comprises two pressure capsules. The advantage of this system consists of
the fact that it is smaller and cheaper.
Double membrane condensor microphones with electrically adjustable pick-up
characteristics are already known from literature (e.g. "Taschenbuch der
technischen Akustik", Springer Verlag, 1975). These concern, however,
"normal" condensor microphones with an external, adjustable and switchable
polarization voltage. Such a circuit could not be realized with the
"electret" microphones used in the hearing aids, as the level and the
polarity of the bias voltage cannot be externally influenced in these
microphones.
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Description  |
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