[0001] The present invention relates to a hearing aid having a self-test capability.
[0002] It is well-known in the art of hearing aids that a large fraction of hearing aids
turned in for repair later proves to operate correctly. Thus in many cases, a perceived
problem with a hearing aid does not relate to a defect in the hearing aid, rather
it relates to the actual adjustment and use of the hearing aid. A lot of time and
other resources are wasted in shipping and diagnosing hearing aids that are not defect.
[0003] It is therefore desirable to provide a hearing aid with a self-test capability so
that a defect in the hearing aid can be signalled to the operator of the hearing aid.
[0004] The operator of the hearing aid may be the hearing impaired user of the hearing aid
or an audiologist fitting, fine tuning or otherwise working with the hearing aid.
[0005] According to the present invention the above-mentioned and other objects are fulfilled
by a hearing aid having at least one input transducer for transforming an acoustic
input signal into a first electrical signal, a signal processor for compensating a
hearing deficiency by generation of a second electrical signal based on the first
electrical signal, an output transducer for conversion of the second signal into sound,
and at least one probe means for determination of a signal parameter at a first point
in the signal path of the hearing aid.
[0006] Further the hearing aid may comprise a test controller for detection of a defect
in the signal path of the hearing aid. The test controller may be connected with and
adapted to control at least one test signal generator, such as a tone generator, a
noise generator, a digital word generator, etc, at least one probe means for determination
of a signal parameter, such as signal level, frequency spectrum, phase characteristic,
auto-correlation, cross-correlation, etc, and at least one signal switch provided
in the hearing aid. The at least one signal switch is provided for connecting a desired
test signal generator or a desired probe means to a desired point in the signal path
for testing of a desired part of the hearing aid. Further signal switches may be provided
for coupling hearing aid components into or out of the signal path of the hearing
aid.
[0007] The signal path is constituted by components and transmission paths of the hearing
aid that receive and transmit signals that are derived from the first electrical signals
of the hearing aid.
[0008] For example, the test controller may be adapted to control respective signal switches
to disconnect all of the at least one input transducers from the signal path of the
hearing aid and to activate a probe means for determination of the signal level at
a selected or predetermined point in the signal path whereby the noise level generated
by input circuitry of the hearing aid may be determined.
[0009] The value of a signal parameter as determined by the at least one probe means may
be compared to a reference value that may be stored in a memory in the hearing aid.
If the detected value lies outside a predetermined range comprising the reference
value, it may be signalled to the operator of the hearing aid that the hearing aid
comprises a defect. The type of defect may also be signalled. For example, a specific
tone or a specific sequence of tones may be generated by the output transducer signalling
that the hearing aid is defect to the hearing impaired user. A specific tone or a
specific sequence of tones may correspond to a specific defect.
[0010] If the hearing aid is connected to a hearing aid programming device with a display,
the fact that the hearing aid comprises a defect may be displayed on the display and,
further, an indication of the type of defect may be displayed.
[0011] For example, if the noise level is greater than a predetermined reference value,
it may be signalled that the hearing aid comprises a defect.
[0012] Typically, hearing defects vary as a function of frequency in a way that is different
for each individual user. Thus, the processor is preferably divided into a plurality
of channels so that individual frequency bands may be processed differently, e.g.
amplified with different gains. Thus, the hearing aid according to the invention may
further comprise a filter bank with bandpass filters for dividing the first electrical
signal into a set of bandpass filtered first electrical signals, and wherein the processor
is adapted to generate the second electrical signal by individual processing of each
of the bandpass filtered first electrical signals and adding the processed electrical
signals into the second electrical signal. The test controller may be adapted to selectively
connect a desired test signal generator or a desired probe means to the output of
a selected bandpass filter. For example, a probe means for level detection may be
connected to the output of a selected bandpass filter in order to determine the noise
level in a selected frequency band.
[0013] In one embodiment of the invention, a test signal generator is provided that is controlled
by the test controller for generation of a desired electronic signal that is transmitted
to the output transducer of the hearing aid for conversion into a sound signal. Typically,
the hearing aid is situated in a compartment with hard walls so that a large part
of the generated acoustic signal is received by the at least one input transducer.
The test controller is further adapted to control a signal switch to connect a selected
probe means, such as a level detector, etc, to one of the at least one input transducers
for determination of a signal parameter, such as the signal level, of the respective
generated first electrical signal.
[0014] The determined value of the signal parameter may be compared to a reference value
that may be stored in a memory in the hearing aid, and if the detected value is less
than the reference value, it may be signalled as previously described to the operator
of the hearing aid that the hearing aid comprises a defect. The type of defect may
also be signalled. For example, it may be displayed on the display of a programming
device that the input port to the input transducer in question should be checked for
ear wax.
[0015] The input transducer connected to the signal path may be the pick-up coil. The pick-up
coil in the hearing aid may be tested in a way similar to the one described previously
for an acoustic input transducer, since the output transducer typically generates
a significant magnetic field that is picked up by the pick-up coil.
[0016] In an embodiment with a filter bank, the probe means may be connected to the output
of a selected bandpass filter to determine signal level of the generated first electrical
signal in the corresponding frequency band. The probe means may be sequentially connected
to the outputs of more or all of the bandpass filters to determine the signal parameter
in question in more or all frequency bands. In this way the frequency spectrum of
the generated first electrical signal may be determined, or harmonic distortion may
be determined. For example, the test controller may be adapted to connect a selected
probe means for level detection to the output of a bandpass filter that comprises
a third harmonic of the output of the test signal generator for determination of harmonic
distortion.
[0017] Signal switches may be provided for connecting a test signal generator, such as a
tone generator to the input of the signal processor, and for connecting a probe means
to the output of the signal processor whereby the gain of the signal processor may
be determined. Further, the gain of the signal processor may be determined as a function
of the frequency.
[0018] Further, the compression of the signal processor, i.e. gain as a function of input
level may be determined, e.g. as a function of frequency.
[0019] It is well known to include an adaptive feedback loop comprising an adaptive filter
in the hearing aid to compensate for acoustic feedback. Acoustic feedback occurs when
the input transducer of a hearing aid receives and detects the acoustic output signal
generated by the output transducer. Amplification of the detected signal may lead
to generation of a stronger acoustic output signal and eventually the hearing aid
may oscillate. The adaptive filter estimates the transfer function from output to
input of the hearing aid including the acoustic propagation path from the output transducer
to the input transducer. The input of the adaptive filter is connected to the output
of the hearing aid and the output signal of the adaptive filter is subtracted from
the input transducer signal to compensate for the acoustic feedback. A hearing aid
of this type is disclosed in US 5,402,496.
[0020] The test controller may be adapted to verify operation of the adaptive feedback loop,
e.g. the test controller may control a signal switch to disconnect the feedback loop
from the signal path and increase the gain of the signal processor until oscillation
occurs. Preferably, the hearing aid is situated in the compartment with hard walls
during this test. The test controller may further be adapted to reconnect the adaptive
feedback loop to the signal path whereby oscillation should seize if the adaptive
feedback loop operates correctly.
[0021] In general, the hearing aid may comprise a test signal generator for injection of
a digital signal at a selected second point in the digital part of the signal path
of the hearing aid, e.g. at the input of the signal processor.
[0022] In response to the signal injected at the second point, a hearing aid without defects
will generate a signal with certain parameter values at the selected first point in
the signal path. The parameters may relate to frequency, amplitude, spectrum, modulation,
phase, etc, and the parameter values of a hearing aid operating without defects are
desired values. The test controller may further be adapted to compare the parameter
values of the actual response signal with the desired values to determine whether
the hearing aid comprises a defect. If an actual value lies outside a predetermined
range comprising the respective desired value, it may be concluded that the hearing
aid in question comprises a defect. The presence of a defect may be signalled to the
operator of the hearing aid as previously described.
[0023] The self-test may be initiated upon user activation of at least one switch positioned
on the hearing aid housing, or on a hearing aid programming device, or on a remote
control unit for the hearing aid, or on a fitting system, etc. Preferably two switches
has to be activated simultaneously or sequentially to avoid accidental activation
of the self-test.
[0024] 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, and
- Figs. 2-5
- show self-test messages as displayed on a programming device for the hearing aid according
to the present invention.
[0025] Fig. 1 shows a hearing aid 10 having two input microphones 12, 14 and a pick-up coil
16. A signal switch matrix 18 selectively connects any of the input transducers 12,
14, 16 to a desired A/D converter 20, 22. For simplicity, the connections of the output
of the second A/D converter 22 are not shown. The output signal 24 from A/D converter
20 is split into a set of bandpass filtered signals 24
1, 24
2,...,24
n by a set 26 of bandpass filters. The processor 28 is divided into a plurality of
channels so that individual frequency bands may be processed differently, e.g. amplified
with different gains. The processor 28 generates the second electrical signal 30 by
individual processing of each of the bandpass filtered first electrical signals 24
1, 24
2,...,24
n and adding the processed electrical signals into the second electrical signal 30.
A D/A converter 32 converts the digital output signal 30 to an analogue signal 34.
An output transducer 38 converts the analogue signal 34 into sound.
[0026] It will be obvious for the person skilled in the art that the circuits indicated
in Fig. 1 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
processor 28 and the filter bank 26 are digital signal processing circuits. In the
present embodiment, all the digital circuitry of the hearing aid 10 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.
[0027] Signal switches 36
1, 36
2,...,36
p are provided throughout the signal path of the hearing aid circuitry for connecting
a test signal generator 40, e.g., a tone generator 40, or a probe means 42, e.g. a
level detector 42, to the respective points in the signal path of the hearing aid
10. A test controller 44 controls the settings of the signal switches 36
1, 36
2,...,36
p for detection of a defect in the signal path of the hearing aid 10. For simplicity,
the control lines connecting the test controller 44 with each of the respective signal
switches 36
1, 36
2,...,36
p are not shown in Fig. 1. The test controller 44 further controls the signal switch
matrix 18 for connecting microphones 12, 14 and pick-up coil 16 to and disconnecting
them from the signal path of the hearing aid 10. Further, the test controller 44 is
adapted to control the test signal generator 40, e.g. to generate an electrical signal
of a selected frequency, e.g. 1 kHz, e.g. with a selected amplitude and/or frequency
modulation, and to control the probe means 42 for determination of a selected signal
parameter, such as the rms value. For example noise level in frequency band 2 may
be determined by the test controller 44 controlling the signal switch matrix 18 to
disconnect all of the input transducers 12, 14, 16 from the A/D converters 20, 22
and connecting the level detector 40 to the output 24
2 of a bandpass filter 26
2. In general, the test controller 44 may control the signal switch 36
1 to connect the test signal generator 40 to the input of the signal processing circuitry
26, 28 and simultaneously disconnecting the input from other signal sources, and the
signal switch 36
4 to connect the probe means 42 to the output of the signal processor 28 facilitating
test of any of the signal processing algorithms performed in the signal processing
circuitry 26, 28. For a given test signal generated by the test signal generator 40,
signal parameters of the output signal generated by the signal processor without any
defects in response to the test signal may be stored in a memory (not shown) in the
hearing aid 10, and the test controller 44 may compare the parameters of the actually
generated output signal of the signal processor 28 with the corresponding stored parameters
in order to determine whether the hearing aid 10 comprises a defect.
[0028] A signal switch 36
3 for interrupting the signal 30 before the signal switch 36
2 and controlled by the test controller 44 is also provided. Having interrupted the
signal 30, the test controller activates the tone generator 40 to generate a signal
of a selected frequency, e.g. 1 kHz, that is transmitted to the output transducer
38 of the hearing aid 10 for conversion into a sound signal. During the test, the
hearing aid 10 is situated in a compartment with hard walls so that a large part of
the generated acoustic signal is received by the at least one input transducer 12,
14. The test controller 44 further controls signal switch 36
i to connect probe means 42 to one of the at least one input transducers 12, 14 for
determination of the signal level of the respective generated first electrical signal
in the respective frequency band i.
[0029] The self-test is initiated upon reception of a signal 48 from the activation means
46. The activation means may be constituted by one or more switches positioned on
the housing of the hearing aid 10 or the activation means may comprise interface means
that is adapted to receive a command 49 for initiation of the self-test from an external
device, such as a remote control unit, a hearing aid programming device 50, a fitting
device, a personal computer, etc.
[0030] For example, the hearing aid 10 may be connected to a hearing aid programming device
50 with a display 52. The operator may initiate the self-test by pressing a specific
key or set of keys 54 on the programming device 50. Then the device 50 displays that
it is ready to perform a self-test as shown in Fig. 2. The self-test is performed
upon activation of key 56. The programming device transmits a corresponding command
to the activation means 46 of the hearing aid 10 and indicates that the self-test
is in progress as shown in Fig. 3. The test described in the previous section may
reveal that no second signal is generated by one of the microphones 12, 14. A probable
cause may be that the input port to the microphone has been occluded by ear wax, thus
the operator is asked to check if this is the problem in Fig. 4. If no problems have
been revealed during the self-test, a corresponding message is displayed as shown
in Fig. 5.
[0031] The input transducer connected to the signal path may be the pick-up coil 16. The
pick-up coil 16 in the hearing aid 10 may be tested like an acoustic input transducer
12, 14, since the output transducer 38 typically generates a significant magnetic
field that is picked up by the pick-up coil 16.
[0032] The test controller 44 controls the signal switch matrix 18 to disconnect all of
the input transducers 12, 14, 16 from the signal path, and connects the test signal
generator 40 to the signal path through signal switch 36
1. The probe means 42 is connected to the output of the signal processor 28 through
signal switch 36
4. By controlling the test signal generator 40 to generate a sequence of signals with
different frequencies, the gain of the signal processor 28 is determined as a function
of the frequency.
[0033] Further, the compression of the signal processor 28, i.e. gain as a function of input
level may be determined, e.g. as a function of frequency.
1. A hearing aid having at least one input transducer for transforming an acoustic input
signal into a first electrical signal, a signal processor for compensating a hearing
deficiency by generation of a second electrical signal based on the first electrical
signal, an output transducer for conversion of the second signal into sound, and a
probe means for determination of a signal parameter at a first point in the signal
path of the hearing aid.
2. A hearing aid according to claim 1, further comprising a test controller that is adapted
to control the probe means for detection of a defect in the signal path of the hearing
aid.
3. A hearing aid according to claim 2, wherein the test controller is adapted to disconnect
all of the at least one input transducers from the signal path circuit and to activate
the probe means for determination of the signal level whereby the noise level generated
by input circuitry of the hearing aid may be determined.
4. A hearing aid according to claim 2 or 3, further comprising a test signal generator
controlled by the test controller for generation of a test signal at a second point
in the signal path.
5. A hearing aid according to claim 4, wherein the test controller is further adapted
to compare the parameters of the signal generated at the first point with desired
parameters to determine whether the hearing aid comprises a defect.
6. A hearing aid according to claim 4 or 5, wherein the second point is situated so that
the test signal is converted into a sound signal, and wherein the test controller
is further adapted to connect one of the at least one input transducers to the signal
path.
7. A hearing aid according to any of the preceding claims, further comprising a filter
bank with bandpass filters for dividing the first electrical signal into a set of
bandpass filtered first electrical signals, and wherein the processor is adapted to
generate the second electrical signal by individual processing of each of the bandpass
filtered first electrical signals and adding the processed electrical signals into
the second electrical signal, and wherein the test controller is adapted to selectively
connect the probe means to the output of one of the bandpass filters.
8. A hearing aid according to claim 7, wherein the test controller is further adapted
to connect the probe means to the output of a bandpass filter that comprises a third
harmonic of the output of the test signal generator for determination of harmonic
distortion.
9. A hearing aid according to any of claims 6-8, wherein the input transducer connected
to the signal path is the telecoil.
10. A hearing aid according to any of claims 4-9, wherein the test controller is further
adapted to verify the gain of the signal processor.
11. A hearing aid according to claim 10, wherein the test controller is further adapted
to verify the gain of the signal processor as a function of frequency.
12. A hearing aid according to any of claims 4-11, wherein the test controller is further
adapted to verify the compression of the signal processor.
13. A hearing aid according to any of claims 2-12, further comprising an adaptive feedback
loop for suppression of acoustic feedback, and wherein the test controller is further
adapted to verify operation of the adaptive feedback loop.
14. A hearing aid according to any of claims 2-13, further comprising activation means
for activating the test controller to initiate the self test.
15. A hearing aid according to claim 14, wherein the activation means comprises one or
more switches positioned at the hearing aid housing.
16. A hearing aid according to claim 14, wherein the activation means comprises interface
means that is adapted to receive commands from a remote control device used to operate
the hearing aid.
17. A hearing aid according to claim 14, wherein the activation means comprises interface
means that is adapted to receive commands from a programming device used to program
the hearing aid.
18. A hearing aid according to claim 14, wherein the activation means comprises interface
means that is adapted to receive commands from a fitting device for the hearing aid.