FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention is in the field of processing signals in or for hearing instruments.
It more particularly relates to a method of converting an acoustic input signal into
an output signal, a hearing instrument, and to a method of manufacturing a hearing
instrument.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Wind exists in different speeds and intensities and may vary significantly over time.
When people wear hearing aids in windy environments, the action of the wind directly
on the hearing aid and on objects in its immediate vicinity can cause a variety of
undesirable audible effects. These effects are usually referred to as wind noise.
Wind noise is a severe problem for users of hearing aids. When wind noise levels are
low or medium, wind noise can mask some speech signals and the hearing aid user usually
experiences decreased speech discrimination. When the wind noise levels are high,
the noise level in the hearing aid can be very high, possibly in excess of 100 dB
SPL. In the worst case, wind can saturate the microphone, thereby causing extremely
high noise levels and discomfort for the hearing aid user. Users therefore often switch
their device off in windy conditions, since in windy surroundings acoustical perception
with the hearing device switched on may become worse than if the hearing device is
switched off.
[0003] It is known to counteract wind noise by mechanical constructional measures. Such
measures alone, however, cannot usually eliminate wind noise to a satisfying degree.
[0004] Therefore, wind noise problems have been studied and many advanced noise detection
and noise cancellation technologies have been implemented in digital hearing aids
to attempt to reduce the detrimental effects of wind on hearing instrument performance.
[0005] Current wind noise canceling technologies suppress wind noise with high-pass filters
or subtract an estimate of the wind noise from the noisy signal. Regardless of the
method, effective wind noise reduction can be achieved only if the presence of wind
noise can be reliably and consistently detected.
[0006] Unfortunately, wind noise exhibits properties and features also common to other noise
signals encountered in daily life. Also, depending on wind speed, direction of the
wind with respect to the device, hair length of the individual, mechanical obstructions
like hats and other factors, magnitude and spectral content of wind noise vary significantly.
For these reasons it is often difficult to uniquely classify the presence of wind
noise and extract it from other environmental noises.
[0007] However, wind noise does also have several unique characteristics that facilitate
its detection. Wind noise predominantly is a low-frequency phenomenon. Many of the
available wind noise detection technologies make use of the low correlation between
two spatially separated microphones or make use of the unique spectral patterns exhibited
by wind noise.
[0008] A known wind noise detection method detects wind noise by computing the correlation
between signals produced by two microphones, as disclosed in US2002/037088. A low
correlation between the outputs from two different microphones can at times be applied
to reliably detect the presence of wind noise. However, the correlation of wind noise
created at different sources differs. Turbulence created at microphone ports causes
signals with a low correlation. On the other hand, when turbulence is created by an
object or obstruction in the vicinity of the microphone openings, the resulting wind
noise signals at the microphones may be highly correlated.
[0009] A second wind noise detection technique is based on the signal from a single microphone.
This method makes use of several well know wind noise properties: high magnitudes,
low auto-correlation, and energy content at very low frequencies. Such a method is
disclosed in EP 1 339 256. In a further development, also disclosed in EP 1 339 256,
pitch filtering and nonlinear filtering have been developed to minimize the attenuation
of the speech target signal.
[0010] As to wind noise reduction, a wind noise reduction technique, disclosed in US2002/037088
for hearing devices with more than one microphone, is to switch the hearing aid from
a two microphone directional, or beamforming, mode to a single microphone or omnidirectional
mode (sometimes referred to as omni mode) when wind noise is detected. This technique
may be combined by the mentioned approach of applying a high-pass filter when switching
from the directional to the omnidirectional mode.
[0011] Alternatively, WO 03/059010 discloses a method that uses two omni microphones in
a hearing aid for the purpose of achieving a wind noise insensitive hearing aid. This
disclosure describes the use of two microphones with different wind noise sensitivities.
When wind noise is detected, the signal from the microphone with the lower wind noise
sensitivity is used as the hearing aid input signal.
[0012] In a single microphone hearing device, wind noise reduction may be achieved by reducing
the low frequency gain in the frequency domain or by applying a highpass filter in
the time domain, as disclosed in EP 1 339 256.
[0013] It is an object of the present invention to provide methods and devices that overcome
disadvantages of prior art wind noise detection and reduction approaches and which
especially should be suited also for relatively high level wind noise. The methods
should be computationally not expensive, so that they may be implemented also in hearing
devices with limited processing power. Preferably, the methods should not be dependent
on the signal correlation as a major indicator for the presence of wind noise and
therefore, in the case of more than one microphone, be equally suited for wind noise
caused at the microphone ports and for the wind noise caused by other objects.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0014] For reducing wind noise effects in a hearing instrument, a converted acoustic signal
is processed in a number of frequency bands, a low frequency band of which is chosen
to be a master band. A wind noise attenuation value is determined in each frequency
band, based on a signal level in the frequency band concerned and on a signal level
in the master band.
[0015] According to a first aspect of the present invention, therefore, a method of processing
a time dependent electric signal being a converted acoustic signal into a processed
electric signal is provided, the method comprising the steps of
- choosing a group of frequency bands and obtaining from the converted acoustic signal
or a section thereof a frequency band signal in each one of said frequency bands,
- choosing one frequency band of said group of frequency bands to be a master band,
said master band having a lower central frequency than a central frequency of a majority
of the frequency bands,
- evaluating in each one of said group of frequency bands using said frequency band
signal, based on pre-defined criteria, a frequency band indicator value,
- evaluating, for each one of said frequency bands, a frequency band wind noise attenuation
using the frequency band indicator value of said frequency band and using the master
band indicator value (in the master band, therefore, as opposed to the further frequency
bands only one frequency band indicator value is necessarily used, namely the master
band's), and
- applying said frequency band attenuation to the converted acoustic signal in each
one of said group of frequency bands, thus obtaining the processed electric signal.
[0016] In the case of low levels of detected wind noise ― i.e. depending on the frequency
band indicator value ― the frequency band attenuation will be zero. Positive frequency
band attenuation here is used for any processing step in the frequency band that reduces
the output signal level compared to the situation where no wind noise would be present.
Often, frequency band attenuation will be implemented in the form of a frequency band
specific gain reduction.
[0017] The chosen course of action is based on the insight that wind noise is predominantly
a low frequency phenomenon. This helps to discriminate wind noise from other sounds,
namely by using the - low frequency - master band indicator value next to the indicator
value of the frequency concerned for the computation of a frequency band specific
attenuation.
[0018] According to a first preferred embodiment of the first aspect of the invention, the
frequency band indicator value is computed based on a comparison with a level threshold:
In each frequency band, the time duration of the averaged signal being above a level
threshold in a certain time interval is measured. In a first variant, the band indicator
value is chosen to be a first figure such as "one" (or "wind is detected") if the
duration is above a duration threshold and a second figure such as "zero" ("no wind")
if the duration is below said duration threshold. In a second variant, the band indicator
value is chosen to be said time duration value (possibly multiplied by a constant).
Variants in which merely the time duration of the signal being above a level threshold
is measured (said measurement being a count in digital systems) feature the substantial
advantage of being computationally very cheap. In a third variant, the band indicator
value is chosen to be a weighted time duration, for example the difference between
the signal and the level threshold integrated over the time sections in which the
signal is higher than the level threshold.
[0019] In this first embodiment, the frequency band attenuation may be chosen to be proportional
to the frequency band indicator value if the master band indicator is indicative of
wind noise (first variant), or if both the frequency band indicator value and the
master band indicator value exceed a certain master band threshold (second and third
variant), respectively, and zero otherwise (zero meaning here that no specific attenuation
is applied at this signal processing stage). It may, however, also be a more complex
function of the frequency band indicator value and the master band indicator value,
and/or may further depend on the signal level in the frequency band.
[0020] In the case of digital signal processing, the time duration value may simply be determined
by counting signals above the level threshold. For example, a frequency band wind
noise comparator may generate a positive value such as +1 if the current, preferably
averaged, signal is higher than the level threshold. It may generate a negative value
such as -1 if the signal is below the level threshold. A wind noise counter will integrate
the results from the wind noise comparator in a run-time mode. Only if the output
from the wind noise counter is higher than a pre-determined threshold value will the
wind noise detector indicate the presence of wind noise in that frequency band, i.e.
yield a non-zero indicator value.
[0021] According to a second preferred embodiment, the computation of the frequency band
indicator value includes computing a signal index, said signal index computation being
performed by determining at least one of a change in intensity sub-index, an intensity
modulation frequency sub-index and of a time duration sub-index and by computing said
signal index from said sub-index or sub-indices, respectively. The signal index computation
may more concretely be carried out in the manner exposed in US 2002/0191804, especially
in paragraphs [0048] to [0050], [0053] to [0054] and [0062] referring to Fig. 3, in
combination with paragraphs [0051] to [0052], [0055] to [0061] and [0063] to [0065]
for the computation based on an intensity change sub-index and a modulation frequency
sub-index as well as paragraphs [0074] to [0090] for the computation further based
on a time duration sub-index and for general considerations concerning the different
sub-indices.
[0022] According to yet another embodiment, the method comprises, previous to the evaluation
of the frequency band indicator value, the step of determining an average of two converted
acoustic signals. These two converted signals may be, according to a first variant,
acoustic signals obtained from two or more different microphones. They may be, according
to a second variant, a signal from one microphone and said signal delayed by a delay
time τ.
[0023] Further signal processing steps may be applied before and/or after the evaluation
of the frequency band attenuation, or may be applied in parallel thereto. The further
signal processing steps may comprise any signal processing algorithms known for hearing
aids or yet to be developed. For obtaining an acoustic output signal, the processed
electric signal is transformed back to the time domain.
[0024] The invention also proposes to use the low correlation of wind noise in conjunction
with other indicators. It has been found that by an averaging step between two signals,
a smoother, more reliable wind noise detection may be achieved. This averaging may
be an averaging between output signals of at least two microphones in a first variant,
so that the low spatial correlation is used, or an averaging between an output signal
of a microphone and the same output signal delayed by a delay time τ so as to use
the low correlation of wind noise along time.
[0025] According to a the second aspect of the present invention, therefore, a method of
reducing disturbances, especially wind disturbances, in a hearing device is provided,
the method comprising the steps of providing a first electric signal being obtained
from an acoustic signal, of providing a second electric signal being obtained from
an acoustic signal, of determining an average of said first and second electric signals,
and of using said average as in input signal for a wind noise detecting stage.
[0026] A wind noise reducing effect according to the first variant of the second aspect
of the invention may be achieved in hearing instruments with at least two microphones
where in the presence of wind noise the instrument may be switched from a directional
mode to a omnidirectional mode in which an average of the output signals of the two
microphones is used as signal. By this simple and computationally inexpensive approach,
in addition to obtaining a smoother input signal for a wind noise detecting stage,
the wind noise level is reduced by up to 3dB in average.
[0027] According to the second variant, the fist electric signal is the converted acoustic
signal
x(
t), and the second electric signal is the converted acoustic signal delayed by a delay
time
x(
t-τ), so that the average is
s(
t)
=ax(
t)
+bx(
t-τ), where
a,b are constants with for example 0<
a,b<1 and
a+b=1.
[0028] An especially preferred embodiment of the second aspect of the invention is the combination
with the first aspect of the invention. The averaging according to the second aspect
of the invention results in a more reliable wind noise detection according to the
first aspect of the invention if wind noise detection is based on the intensity level
over threshold over time.
[0029] According to a third aspect of the invention, a method of processing a time dependent
electric signal is provided, the method comprising the steps of
- choosing a group of frequency bands and obtaining from the converted acoustic signal
or a section thereof a frequency band signal in each one of said frequency bands,
- comparing, in each one of said group of frequency bands, said frequency band signal
with a frequency band level threshold,
- from the result of said comparison, evaluating, in each one of said group of frequency
bands, a frequency band indicator value
- evaluating, for each one of said frequency bands, a frequency band wind noise attenuation
using the frequency band indicator value of said frequency band and using the master
band indicator value, and
- applying said frequency band wind noise attenuation to the converted acoustic signal
in each one of said group of frequency bands, thus obtaining the processed electric
signal.
[0030] This is based on the insight that wind noise exhibits unique spectral features. Setting
individual band specific threshold levels ― they may, as in embodiments of the first
aspect, be factory-set or be set individually according to the needs of the user ―
helps to discriminate wind noise from other sounds. Also, compared to methods where
the entire signal spectrum is analyzed, the proposed way of action is computationally
cheap. Also the third aspect of the invention may be, according to a preferred embodiment,
combined with the second aspect of the invention.
[0031] The combination of the first and/or the third aspect of the invention with the second
aspect of the invention features the considerable advantage that both, characteristic
wind noise features concerning the spatial and/or temporal correlation and spectral
features are used as indicators and that nevertheless the method is computationally
not expensive.
[0032] Also in embodiments of the invention according to its third aspect, the computation
of the frequency band indicator value may include computing a signal index as disclosed
in US 2002/0191804, i.e. also in embodiments of the third aspect, the technique described
in US 2002/0191804 may be used to confirm the detection of wind noise based on its
characteristic intensity change, modulation, and/or duration characteristics.
[0033] The invention also features acoustical devices, especially hearing devices, implementing
the methods according to the aspects of the invention and methods for manufacturing
such acoustical devices.
[0034] The term "hearing instrument" or "hearing device", as understood here, denotes on
the one hand hearing aid devices that are therapeutic devices improving the hearing
ability of individuals, primarily according to diagnostic results. Such hearing aid
devices may be Behind-The-Ear hearing aid devices or In-The-Ear hearing aid devices
(including the so called In-The-Canal and Completely-In-The-Canal hearing devices).
On the other hand, the term stands for devices which may improve the hearing of individuals
with normal hearing e.g. in specific acoustical situations as in a very noisy environment
or in concert halls, or which may even be used in context with remote communication
or with audio listening, for instance as provided by headphones.
[0035] The hearing devices addressed by the present invention are so-called active hearing
devices which comprise at the input side at least one acoustical to electrical converter,
such as a microphone, at the output side at least one electrical to acoustical converter,
such as a loudspeaker, and which further comprise a signal processing unit for processing
signals according to the output signals of the acoustical to electrical converter
and for generating output signals to the electrical input of the electrical to mechanical
output converter. In general, the signal processing circuit may be an analog, digital
or hybrid analog-digital circuit, and may be implemented with discrete electronic
components, integrated circuits, or a combination of both.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0036] In the following, principles of the invention are explained by means of a description
of preferred embodiments. The description refers to drawings with Figures that are
all schematic. The figures show the following:
- Fig. 1 a hearing aid system with a single microphone
- Fig. 2 a hearing aid system with dual microphones and a telecoil
- Fig. 3 an overview on a signal processing system including wind noise management
- Fig. 4 a diagram illustrating a method according to the first aspect of the invention
- Fig. 5 a diagram illustrating processing steps of an embodiment of the method according
to the first aspect of the invention, in a frequency band
- Fig. 6 a very schematic diagram illustrating the frequency bands and level thresholds
in each frequency band
- Fig. 7 a diagram illustrating fixed wind noise reduction
- Figs. 8 and 9 diagrams illustrating adaptive wind noise reduction
- Fig. 10 the combination of wind noise management according to the first aspect of
the invention with a noise canceller,
- Fig. 11 an embodiment of the second aspect of the invention.
- Fig. 12 an illustration of a pre-processing step for reducing fluctuations for the
first aspect of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0037] A hearing aid system with a single microphone is schematically illustrated in
Fig. 1. The system comprises, in a sequence, a microphone 1, an analogue-to-digital converter
2, producing an input signal, a digital signal processing stage (DSP) 3, transforming
the input signal into an output signal, a digital-to-analog converter 4 and a receiver
5. A dual microphone hearing aid system as illustrated in
Fig. 2 differs therefrom in that two microphones 1.1, 1.2 and accordingly two analog-to-digital
converters 2.1, 2.2 are present. For dual microphone aids, there are many different
modes such as omni, dual-omni, fixed beamformer and adaptive beamformer. The shown
embodiment in addition comprises a telecoil 6 and a multiplexer 7, which is controlled
by the DSP 3 and receives the output signals of both, the second microphone 1.2 and
the telecoil. The output from the multiplexer is either the microphone 1.2 signal
or the telecoil 6 signal.
[0038] A scheme of embodiments of the first and third aspect of the invention is schematically
illustrated in
Fig. 3. The sound input, a mixture of signal and noise, is first acquired by a microphone
1 or by a plurality of microphones. Then, it is converted into a digital format by
at least one A/D converter 2 so as to obtain an input signal S
I for the digital signal processing unit. The digital input may then be framed and
windowed with a low-pass filter of length L. The windowed low-pass filter such as
a Hamming Window is used to separate one band of frequencies from another and to remove
the high frequency noise. The resulting windowed time segment of data may also be
folded and added to generate a block of data, which is then converted from the time
domain to the frequency domain, via, for example, a 2N-point fast Fourier transform
(FFT) or by bandpass filters in the time-to-frequency transformation stage 11. The
coefficients of the 2N-point FFT, for example, represent N frequency bands which are
used to calculate the signal strength of the band in the frequency domain. The strength
of the input signal (also called 'signal level' in this text), in each frequency band
varies with time. According to the first aspect of the invention, the signal in each
frequency band is processed by a frequency band specific wind noise detector. Adaptive
noise reduction 12 according to US 2002/0191804 in the shown embodiment is applied
in parallel with wind noise reduction according to the first aspect of the invention.
Low-level wind noise (for example < 50 dB SPL) is attenuated by a set amount (e.g.,
an amount between 6 dB and 12 dB) according to the adaptive noise reduction. When
wind noise exceeds a certain threshold level, wind noise management 13 is activated.
The adaptive noise reduction of US 2002/0191804 may then optionally control or confirm
wind noise detection, as indicated by the arrow 14. In further processing stages 15
― potentially including processing stages upstream of the wind noise management unit
and/or between wind noise management processing steps ― hearing loss correction according
to the state of the art or according to methods yet to be developed is applied. A
frequency-domain-to-time-domain transformation stage 16 is also illustrated in the
figure.
[0039] According to the first and third aspect of the invention, the signal in each frequency
band is processed by a frequency band specific wind noise detector 21.1, ... 21.n
as shown in
Fig. 4. Also, each frequency band comprises a frequency band specific wind noise reduction
stage 22.1, ..., 22.n. According to the first aspect, a low frequency band ― usually
the frequency band covering the lowest audible frequencies ― is chosen to be the master
band. The evaluated wind noise indicator value of the master band is ― together with
the wind noise indicator value of the frequency band concerned ― used for determining
the attenuation level in the frequency band. For example, noise detected in this frequency
band is only confirmed to be wind noise if wind noise is also detected in the master
band. This influence of the master band is indicated by an arrow 23 in Fig. 4. The
attenuation value evaluated by the wind noise reduction stage 22.1, ... 22.n is applied
on the frequency band input signal, as illustrated by the multipliers 24.1, ..., 24.n.
[0040] Fig. 5 shows the wind noise detection in a frequency band. Two stages of a first order averager
are implemented in each frequency band. The signal
S(
f) in the frequency band
f is first processed to produce a fast first order average, as has been implemented
for signal detection in the adaptive noise reduction method of US 2002/0191804. In
discrete notation, the first order averager 31 is defined by the function
x(
n)=α
s(
n)+β
x(
n-1), where β=1-α. In z-transform notation
X(
z)=
H(
z)
•S(
z), where
H(
z) =

. The parameter α is a function of the time constant τ for the first order averager.
Here

where δ=
fe, the effective sampling frequency is related to the particular system. For example,
in a typical implementation of a system with a sampling rate of 16 kHz and a total
system bandwidth of 8 kHz , δ
is 1000 s
-1.
[0041] The fast first order averager 31 has a short time constant (preferably between 1
ms and 10 ms, for example between 5 ms and 7 ms) in order to accurately track the
fast changes of real-life signals for signal and noise detection. The fast first order
averager is followed by a slow first order averager 32. The slow first order averager
is used to compute the long-term signal level in the frequency band, and has a much
longer time constant (preferably between 50 ms and 1500 ms, especially preferred between
200 ms and 1000 ms, for example between 500 ms and 700 ms). The signal level
Y(
f) after the slow first order averager is compared with a level threshold value
T ― being a wind noise level threshold ― to determine whether the signal is higher
or lower than the wind noise threshold. If the level is higher than the level threshold,
the wind noise comparator 33 will generate a positive value such as +1. If the level
is at or below the threshold, the comparator will generate a negative value such as
-1. A wind noise counter 34 will integrate the results from the wind noise comparator
33 in run-time mode. Only if the output from the wind noise counter is higher than
a pre-determined count threshold value, will the wind noise detector indicate the
presence of wind noise and process the signal as wind noise in that frequency band.
This is illustrated by a count threshold comparing unit 35. The count threshold value
may for example be 0 or another fixed value. If the output of the wind noise counter
is lower than the count threshold value, wind noise is not indicated and the signal
is processed as a general signal. In this embodiment, a frequency band indicator value
therefore assumes a value "1" (corresponding to "wind noise detected") or a value
"0" (corresponding to "no wind noise").
[0042] In the embodiment shown in Fig. 5 wind noise detection includes using the detection
method of US 2002/0191804: The signal
X(
f) produced by the fast averager 31 is used by a signal index computing unit 36 to
determine a signal index 37 based on at least one of the change of intensity, the
modulation frequency and of the signal time duration. Only if the signal index is
below (or above, depending on the chosen sign convention) a certain value will wind
noise be confirmed (box 38). Depending on the detection result 39, the input signal
in a following step is subject to wind noise dependent attenuation.
[0043] More in general, there are numerous ways of computing, using a signal index, a frequency
band indicator value.
[0044] In a first variant, as described above, the signal index is used to verify a wind
noise count determined according to the first embodiment. The frequency band indicator
value may be chosen to be a function of both, a wind noise duration and the signal
index.
[0045] In a second variant, the indicator value is set to be the signal index. Then, the
attenuation value is chosen to be a function of the signal index of the frequency
band concerned and of the master band. For example, if the signal index is determined
as in US 2002/0191804 to be maximal in a change-of-intensity, modulation-frequency
and/or time-duration-range where the desired speech and music may be expected, the
attenuation value may be proportional to the negative of the frequency band signal
index plus a constant value or to the negative of the master band signal index plus
a constant value, whichever is smaller.
[0046] In further variants, more complex functions of the signal index and possibly also
the signal level and/or the above mentioned count may be used.
[0047] As set out above, the first stage wind noise detection in a frequency band is further
considered together with the results from the master band. In an embodiment, a positive
wind noise detection result (frequency band indicator value =1) in a particular band
is only considered valid if in the master band wind noise has been detected, too.
This corresponds to a 'logic and'-detection linked to the master band.
[0048] The signal may, in a further processing step, be processed using the noise reduction
method of US 2002/0191804. This may be done whether or not wind noise has been detected
and will be explained further below in somewhat more detail. Thus, the embodiment
described here allows for two ways to combine the method according to the first aspect
of the invention with said noise reduction method. The noise reduction method may
be used for confirming a wind noise detection result and/or it may be used independently
of the wind noise detection and attenuation by being applied to the signal and thus
by reducing wind noise in the manner every other type of noise is reduced.
[0049] Each frequency band can have its own time constants for the fast and slow first order
filters, its independent level threshold value, and possibly also its independent
count threshold value. The level threshold values of an example of the invention are
illustrated in
Fig. 6. Fig 6 shows the level threshold for a wind noise detection scheme including five
frequency bands B0-B4. Usually, the wind noise is located primarily in the low frequency
region of the audio spectrum. Therefore, in the embodiment of Fig. 6, the wind noise
detection concentrates on the low frequency region below 2 kHz, although the method
does not necessarily need to be restricted to only the five bands shown in Fig. 6.
Rather, often more than five frequency bands will be used.
[0050] B0, the band concentrated around 125 Hz, is the master band being the frequency band
that contains a dominant proportion of the wind noise energy. The level threshold
in the embodiment of the figure decreases with increasing frequency.
[0051] Further, each frequency band can optionally have, in the case of combination with
the noise reduction method, its own signal index according to its frequency characteristics.
[0052] Once wind noise is detected in a frequency band, wind noise reduction (being a for
example frequency band specific attenuation) is applied to suppress wind noise instantaneously.
The resulting signal is then supplied to the hearing loss correction component of
the hearing instrument, where it may be filtered and amplified as required, whereupon
it will be converted back to the time domain and converted to a sound signal.
[0053] The transformation of the signal between the time domain and the frequency domain
can also be performed with other methods than FFT, for example with bandpass filters
or with wavelet transforms.
[0054] In the following, two embodiments of wind noise reduction are described. Both embodiments
may be combined with any wind noise detection scheme according to aspects of the invention.
[0055] Fig. 7 illustrates fixed wind noise reduction. If the noise level is above the level threshold
(i.e. if the output of the counter in the frequency band is above the count threshold)
and this also applies to the master band, the noise level in the frequency band is
reduced by a fixed attenuation value. Such a fixed attenuation value may be between
3 dB and 30 dB, preferably between 6 dB and 18 dB, for example 6 dB or 12 dB. In an
embodiment, the attenuation value may be selected by the user.
[0056] This fixed wind noise reduction helps to improve speech intelligibility and comfort
with low or medium wind noise. When wind noise becomes very strong, such a wind noise
reduction does not sufficiently reduce the strong wind noise levels which may still
completely mask the speech signal or cause microphone saturation and considerable
discomfort to the user. Therefore, for different wind speeds causing different wind
noise levels, the fixed wind noise reduction may not be sufficient in a frequency
band and overly aggressive in another band. Also, when wind changes its speed or direction,
or when a person changes orientation with respect to wind direction, the wind noise
level or pattern will change in different frequency regions. This can result in changes
of wind noise level detected by wind noise detection. Such a change in wind noise
detection can cause the wind noise reduction to be enabled or disabled in some frequency
bands over time. The result is a modulated output signal which can be perceived as
an undesirable or uncomfortable artifact. To address these limitations, an adaptive
wind noise reduction strategy is proposed according to a second embodiment. The logic
is that if wind noise over a certain level can be reliably detected and identified
as wind noise in specific frequency bands- this detection and identification may be
accomplished by the above described wind noise detection method ― a stronger wind
noise can be treated differently than a lower level wind noise. The actual wind noise
reduction rule may be: the stronger the wind noise level, the more aggressive the
wind noise reduction. This is illustrated in Figs. 8, 9, and 10.
Fig. 8 shows noise levels caused by strong wind 41, medium wind 42 and low wind 43, respectively,
as a function of the frequency. Also shown is the level threshold 44 as a function
of the frequency. In practice, the noise levels and the level threshold may be considered
as discrete functions of the frequency, namely to provide a different specific value
in each band.
[0057] The strong, medium and low wind levels have different border frequencies
fS,
fM, and
fL which are the maximum frequencies for which the signal is attenuated. The attenuation
as a function of the frequency for the noise level of Fig. 8 is shown in
Fig. 9. As can be seen from this figure, the attenuation
a for strong 51, medium 52 and low wind 53 is proportional to the difference of the
respective noise level to the frequency dependent level threshold:
a(
f)
=cf(
L(
f)
-LTh(
f)), where
L(
f) and
LTh(
f) are the actual level and the threshold level, respectively, and
cf is a constant, which may but does not have to be frequency dependent. More in general,
the attenuation
a(
f) is a monotonic function of (
L(
f)
-LThr(
f)) which is preferably 0 for
L(
f)-
LThr(
f)=0.
[0058] The actual (wind) noise level
L(
f) may, for example, be obtained from the output
Y(
f) of the slow averager 32 shown in Fig. 5.
[0059] As explained above, the noise canceling system of US 2002/0191804 may be used to
confirm wind noise in a frequency band, or, more in general, to evaluate a frequency
band indicator value. An other aspect of applying the mentioned noise canceling system
in the context of wind noise canceling is briefly described with reference to
Fig. 10. Since wind noise has many signal properties in common with stationary or pseudo-stationary
noises, the noise cancelling system (NC) can detect wind noise and therefore apply
adaptive noise reduction accordingly. When wind noise is low or at a medium level,
NC can detect and attenuate wind noise with the same effectiveness as it attenuates
any other stationary or pseudo-stationary noises as described in US 2002/0191804.
Therefore, in addition to the effective wind noise reduction described above, NC may
contribute additional noise reduction for all levels of wind noise. For low or medium
wind noise, NC will reduce wind noise with notable improvement as it does for other
types of noise. For strong or very strong wind noise, NC as described in US 2002/0191804
does not offer enough wind noise reduction. However, the combination with the above
described adaptive wind noise reduction does, as is illustrated in Fig. 10. The figure
shows attenuation values from the noise cancelling system 61, from the adaptive wind
noise reduction method according to the relation
a(
f)
= cf (
L(
f)
-LTh (
f)) 62, and a total attenuation value 63 being the sum of the aforementioned attenuation
values.
[0060] Each frequency band can have a different wind noise reduction scheme depending on
the wind noise level in that frequency band, thereby achieving a combined reduction
from both NC and (adaptive) wind noise reduction. The actual reduction will follow
the following rules in any frequency band:
- When the wind noise level is low, a level below the level threshold, only NC attenuates
wind noise as well as common noises.
- When wind noise increases over the level threshold of, wind noise reduction according
to embodiments of the first aspect of the invention is activated and it generates
additional reduction according to the wind noise level. The higher the wind noise
level, the greater the reduction from the adaptive wind noise reduction. Such an increasingly
aggressive reduction mainly serves to optimize comfort for the user.
- When wind noise reaches a higher level, NC will generate the maximum reduction, which
is usually limited to 12 dB or 18 dB. When the wind noise level increases over the
very high level, the reduction from NC reaches its maximum value.
- The combined wind noise reduction is the sum of both NC and adaptive wind noise reduction.
Overall, an optimized wind noise reduction for both improving intelligibility and
comfort is achieved by the combination of NC and adaptive wind noise reduction.
- The methods are adapted to work optimally for single and dual microphone hearing aid
implementations.
[0061] Each frequency band can have a different attenuation scheme from either NC or wind
noise management according to the first aspect of the invention, which will create
different overall wind noise reduction in each band. Therefore, the wind noise management
benefit can be optimized for different users with different hearing losses and different
daily life styles. If the wearer of the hearing aid is exposed to a wide open windy
environment such as a golf course, the wearer may want to have a very aggressive and
powerful wind noise reduction scheme. If a person lives in a city or an environment
without strong winds, the person may just want to use a moderate wind noise reduction
scheme. Therefore, the flexible wind noise reduction scheme invented here can bring
the optimized benefit of intelligibility and comfort improvements for different people
in widely different environments. This results in a personalized adaptive wind noise
management for individual hearing loss and life style.
[0062] According to the second aspect of the invention, a method of reducing disturbances,
especially wind disturbances, in a hearing device is provided. This aspect is based
on the fact that the wind noise signals, being mainly caused by turbulences, are highly
random.
[0063] A first embodiment of the second aspect concerns a hearing aid comprising at least
two microphones, preferably omnidirectional microphones. In this description, the
case of two microphones is described, however, this first embodiment of the second
aspect of the invention also works for systems comprising more than two microphones.
[0064] In prior art hearing instruments, the hearing aid is switched from a two microphone
directional, or beamforming, mode to a single microphone or omnidirectional mode when
wind noise is detected. Some additional wind noise reduction might be achieved by
applying a highpass filter when switching from the directional to the omnidirectional
mode:
[0065] According to the second aspect of the invention, in the case of wind noise, an average
of the signals of two microphones is determined instead of switching off one microphone.
In other words, if the microphone outputs are x
1(t) and x
2(t), the method comprises the step of determining

[0066] For the case where
a=b=0.5, this process step is illustrated in
Fig. 11, where S
1 and S
2 denote the input signals from the two microphones. The figure, next to an averager
71 (which may be a simple adder) also shows a switch 72 for switching between the
averaged signal produced by the averager and the signal
Sd obtained conventionally in a directional mode.
[0067] Most common acoustic signals in normal environments originate from a signal source,
which is further away from the two microphones than 100 times the microphone port
separation. In this case, the relationship
x2(t)=x1(t-τ) is valid, where τ is the difference in the arrival time of a signal at the port openings
of microphone 1 and microphone 2. τ depends on the actual port separation, the speed
of sound, and the direction of the incoming sound. For a typical port distance of
10 mm and sound coming in from a direction defined by the connecting line of the microphone
port openings, the time delay is 29.4 µs. Far field acoustic signals such as speech
or music signals will not be affected by replacing a single microphone output
x1(t) by an averaged value
s(t).
[0068] In contrast thereto, wind signals can not be treated as plain wave signals. Wind
noise being the result of air turbulences at the microphone port locations leads to
less correlated microphone outputs
x1(t) and
x2(t). Therefore, the relationship
x2(
t)
=x1(
t-τ) is not valid for wind noise. Instead, wind noise is a highly random signal. Therefore,
determining an average s(t), being a simple and computationally inexpensive approach,
reduces the wind noise level, for example by 3dB in average if, in a preferred mode,
a=b=0.5 for microphones with equal sensitivity.
[0069] The switching from a directional mode to this omnidirectional averaging mode may
be done manually by the user or automatically upon detection of wind noise. For switching
automatically, the wind noise detection method in accordance with the first aspect
of the invention may be used.
[0070] The averaging of the two microphone input signals can be done with the raw analogue
or digitized input signal or, as an alternative, can be done in frequency bands.
[0071] The at least two microphones of a hearing aid implementing the method according to
the second aspect are preferably omnidirectional microphones. In this description,
the case of two microphones is described, however, the second aspect of the invention
also works for systems comprising more than two microphones.
[0072] In single microphone hearing instruments, where only one microphone output exists,
one may not use the low correlation of wind noise between two microphone outputs.
However, it is possible to use the wind noise's low correlation along time by introducing
pseudo dual-omni processing by first delaying the signal
x1(t) by a time τ to produce a signal
x2(t)=x1(t-τ). One then gets
s (t) =
ax1 (t) +bx1 (t - τ), where
a +b = 1. This is illustrated in
Fig. 12, where 81 refers to the averaging stage and 82 to a delay stage. The typical delay
time should be around 125 µs in order to again use the low correlation of wind noise
without affecting the desired acoustic signals like speech or music. However, a delay
of 125 µs acts to produce a notch in the response, and thereby a signal reduction
at
f=1/(2τ)=4 kHz. In order to avoid adverse effects by this, a delay less than 125 µs
may be chosen. More generally, as a delay time τ, a value between 40 µs and 100 µs,
especially between 60 µs and 90 µs is preferred. Most preferred are delay times below
83 µs, such that a first notch is beyond 6 kHz. The effect of the approach according
to this embodiment decreases if the delay time is reduced below 40 µs.
[0073] In an especially preferred embodiment of the invention, the second aspect of the
invention as illustrated in Figs. 11 and 12, is combined with the first aspect. This
is due to a further advantage of the approach according to this second aspect of the
invention: That determination of
s(t) will produce a signal with reduced intensity level changes as a function of time.
This smoothing of the signal
s(t) results in a very suitable input signal for the method according to the first aspect
of this invention making wind noise detection more reliable.
[0074] When the second aspect of the invention is combined with its first or third aspect,
the processing stage shown in Fig. 11 or the processing stage of Fig. 12 will be arranged
between the A/D converting stage(s) 2; 2.1, 2.2 and the frequency-to-time-domain-converting
stage 11. In other words, its input(s) will be operationally connected to the output
of the A/D converting stage(s), and its output will be operationally connected to
the input of the frequency-to-time-domain-converting stage 11.
[0075] The above description of embodiments is not limiting. Various other embodiments may
be envisaged. Especially, the selection of frequency bands may be arbitrarily varied,
also the frequency bands used for processing do not have to cover the entire audible
spectrum.
[0076] The signal processing unit does not have to be physically one unit, such as a single
microprocessor but may comprise several elements processing the analog and/or digital
signal, such as microprocessors, integrated circuits, Analog-to-Digital- and Digital-to-Analog-converters,
filter banks, passive elements etc.
[0077] The methods according to the invention may be combined with state-of-the-art methods
of reducing wind noise, for example with high-pass filtering or a method disclosed
in EP 1 339 256.
1. A method for processing a time dependent electric signal being a converted acoustic
signal into a processed electric signal, the method comprising the steps of
- choosing a group of frequency bands and obtaining from the converted acoustic signal
or a section thereof a frequency band signal in each one of said frequency bands,
- choosing one frequency band of said group of frequency bands to be a master band,
said master band having a lower central frequency than a central frequency of a majority
of the frequency bands,
- evaluating in each one of said group of frequency bands using said frequency band
signal, based on pre-defined criteria, a frequency band indicator value,
- evaluating, for each one of said frequency bands, a frequency band wind noise attenuation
using the frequency band indicator value of said frequency band and using the master
band indicator value, and
- applying said frequency band wind noise attenuation to the converted acoustic signal
in each one of said group of frequency bands, thus obtaining the processed electric
signal.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the evaluation of the frequency band indicator
value comprises the steps of comparing a level of the frequency band signal with a
frequency band level threshold, and of at least one of integrating, counting, adding
and of averaging results of said comparison.
3. A method according to claim 2, wherein for the evaluation of the frequency band indicator
value a difference between the frequency band signal level and the frequency band
level threshold is determined and integrated over time.
4. A method according to claim 3, wherein only the time intervals are used for the integration
where the frequency band level is higher than the frequency band level threshold.
5. A method according to any one of claims 2-4, wherein the frequency band level threshold
of at least two different frequency bands differs.
6. A method according to any one of claims 2-4, wherein the frequency band level threshold
of all frequency bands is identical.
7. A method according to claim 5, wherein the level threshold of the master band is the
highest of all frequency band level thresholds of said group of frequency bands.
8. A method according to any one of claims 2-7, wherein the frequency band signal is
chosen to be a digital signal, wherein result of said comparison is chosen to be a
first value if the level is above the level threshold and a second value different
from the first value if the level is below the level threshold, and wherein the integration
is a summation of the results of said comparison.
9. A method according to any one of the previous claims, wherein for the evaluation of
the frequency band wind noise attenuation also a level of the frequency band signal
is used and wherein the frequency band wind noise attenuation is a monotonic function
of said level of the frequency band signal.
10. A method according to any one of the previous claims further comprising the additional
step of evaluating a frequency band signal index by determining at least one of a
change of intensity, a frequency of intensity modulation and of a signal time duration
in said frequency band and by determining said signal index therefrom, wherein said
wind noise attenuation is evaluated dependent on said frequency band signal index.
11. An acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising an input transducer
(1) for converting an acoustic input signal into a converted input signal, a signal
processing unit, and an output transducer (5), wherein the input transducer is operationally
connected to the output transducer via the signal processing unit, wherein the signal
processing unit, comprises
- a time-to-frequency domain converter (11) for receiving the converted input signal
and providing a master band signal and several further frequency band signals,
- for the master band signal and for each further frequency band signal, an indicator
value computing stage (34),
- for the master band signal and for each frequency band signal, a wind noise attenuation
computing stage (22.1, ...,22.n),
- wherein said wind noise attenuation computing stage (22.1) of said master band is
operationally connected to an output of the master band's indicator value computing
stage,
- and wherein said wind noise attenuation computing stage of each further frequency
band is operationally connected to an output of the indicator value computing stage
of said further frequency band and to the output of the master band's indicator value
computing stage.
12. A device according to claim 11, wherein at least one of said indicator value computing
stages comprises a comparator (33) for comparing a level of the frequency band signal
with a level threshold, and an integrator for integrating results output by said comparator.
13. A device according to claim 12, comprising an analog-to-digital converter arranged
upstream of said comparator, wherein said comparator produces a first value if the
level is above the level threshold and a second value different from the first value
if the level is below the level threshold, and wherein the integrator is operable
to sum up the results of said comparison.
14. A device according to any one of claims 11 to 13, wherein at least the wind noise
attenuation computing stage of one of said frequency bands is operable to provide
said wind noise attenuation as a function of a level of the frequency band signal.
15. A method for manufacturing an acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising
the steps of providing an input transducer (1) to convert an acoustic input signal
into a converted input signal, a signal processing unit, and an output transducer
(5), the signal processing unit comprising a time-to-frequency domain converter (11)
for receiving the converted input signal and providing a master band signal and several
further frequency band signals, for the master band signal and for each further frequency
band signal, an indicator value computing stage, for the master band signal and for
each frequency band signal, a wind noise attenuation computing stage, and establishing
the following operational connections:
- between the input transducer and the processing unit and between the processing
unit and the output transducer,
- between outputs of the a time-to-frequency domain converter and an input of each
indicator value computing stage
- between an output of the master band indicator value computing stage and an input
of the master band wind noise attenuation computing stage
- between an output of each further frequency band's indicator value computing stage
and a first input of said further frequency band's wind noise attenuation computing
stage and between the output of the master band indicator value computing stage and
a second input of said further frequency band's wind noise attenuation computing stage.
16. A method for processing a first time dependent electric signal obtained from an acoustic
signals and a second time dependent electric signal obtained from an acoustic signal
and thereby reducing disturbances, especially wind disturbances, the method comprising
the steps of determining an average of said first and second electric signals and
of using said average as in input signal for a wind noise detecting stage.
17. The method according to claim 16, wherein the first time dependent electric signal
is a converted acoustic signal obtained from a first acoustical-to-electrical converter
and the second time dependent electric signal is a converted acoustic signal obtained
from a second acoustical-to-electrical converter, the first and second acoustical-to-electrical
converter being placed at different positions.
18. The method according to claim 16, wherein the first electric signal is chosen to be
a converted input signal obtained from an acoustical-to-electrical signal converter
and the second electric signal is chosen to a delayed input obtained by delaying said
converted input signal by a pre-determined delay time τ.
19. The method according to claim any one of claims 16-18, wherein the relation s(t) = ax1 (t) + bx2 (t) holds between the average s(t), the electric signal x1(t) and the second electric signal x2(t), where a and b are constants and 0<a, 0<b.
20. The method according to any one of claims 16-19, wherein the processed electric signal
is further processed by a method according to any one of claims 1-9.
21. An acoustical device, especially a hearing device, especially according to any one
of claims 11-14, comprising a first and a second input transducer (1.1, 1.2) for converting
an acoustic input signal into a first and a second converted input signal, a signal
processing unit, and an output transducer (5), wherein the input transducers are operationally
connected to the output transducer via the signal processing unit, wherein the signal
processing unit, comprises an averaging stage operable to determine an average of
the first and second converted input signal, wherein an output of said averaging stage
is switchable to be operationally connected to an input of at least one further processing
stage.
22. A method for manufacturing an acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising
the steps of providing a first and a second input transducer (1) to convert an acoustic
input signal into a first and a second converted input signal, a signal processing
unit, and an output transducer (5), the signal processing unit comprising an averaging
stage and a switch, and of establishing an operational connection between outputs
of the first and second input transducers and two inputs of the averaging stage and
between an output of the averaging stage and the switch, so that said output of the
averaging stage is switchable to be operationally connected to an input of at least
one further processing stage.
23. An acoustical device, especially a hearing device, especially according to any one
of claims 11-14, comprising an input transducer (1) for converting an acoustic input
signal into a converted input signal, a signal processing unit, and an output transducer
(5), wherein the input transducer is operationally connected to the output transducer
via the signal processing unit, wherein the signal processing unit, comprises a delay
stage (82) operable to compute a delayed input signal from the converted input signal
and a averaging stage (81) operable to determine an average of the converted input
signal and the delayed input signal.
24. A method for manufacturing an acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising
the steps of providing an input transducer (1) to convert an acoustic input signal
into a first and a second converted input signal, a signal processing unit, and an
output transducer (5), the signal processing unit comprising a delay stage (82) and
a averaging stage (81) operable to determine an average of the converted input signal
and the delayed input signal, and of establishing an operational connection between
an output of the input transducer the delay stage, between the output of the input
transducer and a first input of the averaging stage, and between an output of the
delay stage and a second input of the averaging stage.
25. A method for processing a time dependent electric signal being a converted acoustic
signal into a processed electric signal, the method comprising the steps of
- choosing a group of frequency bands and obtaining from the converted acoustic signal
or a section thereof a frequency band signal in each one of said frequency bands,
- comparing, in each one of said group of frequency bands, said frequency band signal
with a frequency band level threshold,
- from the result of said comparison, evaluating, in each one of said group of frequency
bands, a frequency band indicator value
- evaluating, for each one of said frequency bands, a frequency band wind noise attenuation
using the frequency band indicator value of said frequency band, and
- applying said frequency band wind noise attenuation to the converted acoustic signal
in each one of said group of frequency bands, thus obtaining the processed electric
signal.
26. A method according to claim 25, wherein the evaluation of the frequency band indicator
value comprises the step of at least one of integrating, counting, adding and of averaging
results of said comparison of the frequency band signal with the level threshold.
27. A method according to claim 25 or 26, wherein the frequency band level thresholds
of at least two different frequency bands differ.
28. A method according to any one of claims 25-27, wherein the frequency band signal is
chosen to be a digital signal, wherein result of said comparison is chosen to be a
first value if the level is above the level threshold and a second value different
from the first value if the level is below the level threshold, and wherein the frequency
band indicator value is determined by a summation of the results of said comparison
at different points in time.
29. A method according to any one of claims 25-28, wherein said time-dependent electric
signal is chosen to be an average signal obtained by a method according to any one
of claims 15-18.
30. An acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising an input transducer
(1) for converting an acoustic input signal into a converted input signal, a signal
processing unit, and an output transducer (5), wherein the input transducer is operationally
connected to the output transducer via the signal processing unit, wherein the signal
processing unit, comprises
- a time-to-frequency domain converter for receiving the converted input signal and
providing a plurality of frequency band signals,
- for each frequency band signal, an indicator value computing stage,
- said indicator value computing stage comprising a comparator operable to compare
a level of the frequency band signal with a level threshold and to evaluate, from
this comparison, the indictor value,
- for each frequency band signal, a wind noise attenuation computing stage,
- wherein said wind noise attenuation computing stage of each frequency band is operationally
connected to an output of the indicator value computing stage of said frequency band.
31. A method for manufacturing an acoustical device, especially a hearing device, comprising
the steps of providing an input transducer (1) to convert an acoustic input signal
into a converted input signal, a signal processing unit, and an output transducer
(5), the signal processing unit comprising a time-to-frequency domain converter for
receiving the converted input signal and providing a plurality of frequency band signals,
for each frequency band signal, an indicator value computing stage, said indicator
value computing stage comprising a comparator operable to compare a level of the frequency
band signal with a level threshold and to evaluate, from this comparison, the indictor
value for each frequency band signal, a wind noise attenuation computing stage, and
establishing the following operational connections:
- between the input transducer and the processing unit and between the processing
unit and the output transducer,
- between outputs of the a time-to-frequency domain converter and an input of the
comparator of each indicator value computing stage
- between an output of each frequency band's indicator value computing stage and a
an input of said further frequency band's wind noise attenuation computing stage.