(19)
(11) EP 1 017 253 B1

(12) EUROPEAN PATENT SPECIFICATION

(45) Mention of the grant of the patent:
31.10.2012 Bulletin 2012/44

(21) Application number: 99310611.1

(22) Date of filing: 24.12.1999
(51) International Patent Classification (IPC): 
H04R 25/00(2006.01)

(54)

Blind source separation for hearing aids

Blind-Trennung von Signalquellen für Hörhilfegeräte

Séparation aveugle de sources pour prothèses auditives


(84) Designated Contracting States:
CH DE DK FR GB LI

(30) Priority: 30.12.1998 US 223485

(43) Date of publication of application:
05.07.2000 Bulletin 2000/27

(73) Proprietor: Siemens Corporation
Iselin, NJ 08830 (US)

(72) Inventors:
  • Rosca, Justinian
    Monmouth Junction, NJ 08852 (US)
  • Darken, Christian
    Riverton, NJ 08077 (US)
  • Petsche, Thomas
    Neschanic Station, NJ 08853 (US)
  • Holube, Inga
    91058 Erlangen (DE)

(74) Representative: O'Connell, David Christopher 
Haseltine Lake LLP Redcliff Quay 120 Redcliff Street
Bristol BS1 6HU
Bristol BS1 6HU (GB)


(56) References cited: : 
EP-A- 0 848 573
WO-A-97/11533
EP-A2- 0 883 325
   
       
    Note: Within nine months from the publication of the mention of the grant of the European patent, any person may give notice to the European Patent Office of opposition to the European patent granted. Notice of opposition shall be filed in a written reasoned statement. It shall not be deemed to have been filed until the opposition fee has been paid. (Art. 99(1) European Patent Convention).


    Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION


    1. Field of the Invention



    [0001] The present invention generally relates to electronic filtering for enhancing a desired signal component of a mixed signal, and more specifically to a method and apparatus for real-time unmixing (separation or deconvolving) of a desired signal from a mixture of independent signals, particularly useful, for example, in a hearing aid.

    2. Description of the Prior Art



    [0002] When one is listening to someone or something, "noise" or undesired signals that interfere with the voice or desired signal, are ubiquitous. People with hearing impairment are especially vulnerable to noise. Background conversations, interference from digital devices (mobile telephones), car, or other specific environment noises, can make it very difficult for a hearing impaired person to understand a desired speech signal. A reduction in the noise level of a signal, coupled with an automatic focus on a desired signal component, can significantly improve the performance of an electronic voice processor, such as one used in an advanced hearing aid.

    [0003] WO 97/11533 discloses a directional acoustic signal processor and EP 0 883 325 discloses a method and processor for processing sounds, suitable for use in association with a hearing aid, which maximizes the signal to noise ratio of a signal from a source in an on-beam direction.

    [0004] In recent years, hearing aids using digital signal processing have been introduced. They contain one or more microphones, analog to digital converters, digital signal processors, and speakers. Usually the digital signal processors divide the incoming signals into several frequency regions using filter banks. Within each of those regions, signal gain and dynamic compression parameters can be individually adjusted in accordance with the requirement for a particular user of the hearing aid, in an attempt to improve intelligibility. Additionally, digital signal processing algorithms for feedback reduction and noise reduction are available, however they have major limitations. For example, some of the disadvantages of the currently available algorithms for noise reduction are the limited improvement they obtain when speech and background noise are in the same frequency region, due to their inability to distinguish between speech and background noise.

    [0005] One relatively new digital signal processing approach currently finding use for noise reduction in areas such as speech recognition, data communication and sensor signal processing, involves a technique known generally as Independent Component Analysis (ICA), and in more specific applications as Blind Source Separation (BSS). This technique searches an input signal having multiple components, for a signal transformation which will minimize the statistical dependence between its components. Accordingly, BSS is a signal separation technique capable of delivering dramatic improvements in signal to noise ratio for mixtures of independent signals, such as multiple voices or mixtures of voice and noise signals.

    [0006] It is an object of the present invention to provide an electronic filtering technique incorporating BSS processing which can operate in real time to enhance reception of a desired signal, such as the voice of a nearby person, and furthermore, if desired, can be incorporated in a hearing aid.

    SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION



    [0007] This object is achieved by a device according to claim 1 and a method according to claim 7.

    [0008] An electronic filtering device for performing real-time unmixing of a signal desired to be recovered by a user of the device, where the desired signal emanates from one of a plurality of independent signal sources. Two microphones positioned along a common axis develop first and second electrical input signals in response to reception by the microphones of acoustic signals from the plurality of independent signal sources. The spatial position of the common axis of the microphones is controllable in real time by the user to align the common axis so it points in the direction of the source of the desired signal, thereby imparting an inherent directionality to the input signals. An adaptive unmixing signal processor responsive to the input signals develops output signals wherein the desired signal is separated from the mixture signal. In one preferred embodiment of the invention a preprocessor is provided to enhance the inherent directionality of the input signals by establishing a relative time delay therebetween. Furthermore, the preprocessor may subject the enhanced input signals to a decorrelation processing before their application to the unmixing signal processor. A selected output of the unmixing signal processor can be applied as an input to a speaker for reproduction, or can be further processed for signal enhancement by an additional processor before reproduction.

    BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS



    [0009] 

    Figure 1 illustrates in block diagram form an electronic filtering device constructed in accordance with the present invention;

    Figure 2 illustrates in block diagram form the preprocessing stage of the electronic filtering device shown in Figure 1;

    Figure 3 illustrates in block diagram form the technique of Blind Source Separation as used in the electronic filtering device of the invention; and

    Figure 4 illustrates in block diagram form an exemplary embodiment of a Blind Source Separator useful in the electronic filtering device of the invention.


    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION



    [0010] Figure 1 illustrates in block diagram form an application of the invention for use in hearing aids. A hearing aid 10 includes two microphones 12 and 14 for developing two input signals 1 and 2, respectively. In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the microphones are mounted in the hearing aid such that a common axis of their positioning always extends substantially in the direction in which the wearer of the hearing aid looks when being attentive to a signal source such as a voice. This microphone positioning imparts an inherent directionality to input signals 1 and 2. Since each microphone develops electrical signals representative of the acoustic waves received thereby from sound sources within it's operating range, each input signal may comprise a mixture of unknown signals from an unknown number of signal sources. Input signals 1 and 2 are processed in three main stages. At a first stage 16, the input signals are preprocessed for enhancing the inherent directionality already imparted thereto by their positioning. At a second stage 18, the resulting signals are subjected to an unmixing processing (sometimes referred to as separation processing), which is designed to produce estimates of the original unknown signals picked-up by microphones 12 and 14. At a third stage 20, the outputs of the unmixing processing are preferably postprocessed to produce the desired signal 22, which can then be applied to a speaker 24 of the hearing aid 10 for reproduction and presentation to a user.

    [0011] As illustrated in Fig. 2, preprocessing stage 16 begins with normalization of the raw input signals. Automatic Gain Control is used to normalize input signals 1 and 2 to a [-1,+1] range. The inputs 1 and 2 are now given in by a vector x = (x1(t),x2(t)).

    [0012] In accordance with one aspect of the invention, in order to adapt a blind source separation (BSS) technique for use in a device as small as a hearing aid, and to have it operate in real-time, preprocessing stage 16 also provides at least the first, and preferably both of the following additional processing:
    • Enhancement of signal source directionality inherent in the input signals, resulting from a directional arrangement of microphones 12 and 14 with respect to a source of interest. In the hearing aid exemplary embodiment, the directionality of the source of interest is presumed to be in the direction that the user is looking. Accordingly, the microphones are positioned on the hearing aid along an axis that is in the direction that the user would be looking, and the direction of the source of interest is presumend to be at zero degrees with respect to such axis. The direction of a second source can be estimated in the preprocessing stage (delay box in 16) resulting in an adaptive delay (δ). The delay is a positive or negative fractional delay, such that the most powerful component of the inputs other than the one approximately aligned with the microphone axis arrives synchronously at the two microphones. For example this would be zero if the second source were perpendicular to the microphone axis. For this enhancement, the normalized input signals x = (x1(t),x2(t)) are modified as follows:



    • Decorrelation of the input signals. In the exemplary embodiment decorrelation is carried out by a diagonalization of the correlation matrix. More specifically, let C=Covariance(xT), where xT is a transpose of x. If significant correlation exists between the two input signals (x1, x2), a decorrelation over a time window D means transformation of the signals in two steps: (1) centering around the mean over the data in the window D; and (2) Affine transformation of the resulting data points in order to diagonalize the covariance matrix of the resulting signals. Assuming that x is centered around its mean, we use the following transformation:



    [0013] In the illustrated embodiment, the window D comprised 16,000 samples.

    [0014] The above described preprocessing facilitates the subsequent BSS processing to arrive at a solution in a shorter time than if the preprocessing was not provided, and furthermore, increases the probability that the BSS processing will arrive at a valid solution instead of a local minimum.

    [0015] Figure 3 illustrates the principles of the operation of a BSS algorithm upon which the unmixing or separation of the desired component from the input signals is based. The technique is called Blind Source Separation because it makes few assumptions about the type of signals present in the mixture. As well known by those of ordinary skill in this technology, BSS processing is intended to recover the set of n unknown source signals from a set of their mixtures, assuming that the n source signals are independent. More specifically, as shown in Figure 3, if s is a vector of n sources, and x is a vector of m observations of those sources (i.e., the raw input signals from the m microphones), the goal of a BSS processor is to discover the m by n mixing matrix A:

    x = As ,where x is the preprocessed signals shown in Figure 2 (i.e., x").

    or equivalently, and as is done in the present invention, to find an unmixing or separating matrix W such that

    z = Wx = ŝ ≈ s where z is the vector of the independent estimates of component signals s and z is an estimate of the source signals.



    [0016] As previously noted, the sources s=(s1, s2) and the environment-dependent mixing matrix A are unknown. The BSS processor (which as well known, may be implemented using a neural network) only sees the inputs x=(x1,x2) coming from two microphones in order to determine estimates z=(z1, z2) of the independent component signals s. In this case, the inputs x are actually the preprocessed signals x", previously described.

    [0017] Figure 4 illustrates a block diagram of the main components of a BSS processor 400. BSS processor 400 comprises: an unmixing component 402 for recording and updating the state of the unmixing process defined by parameters W and v; a nonlinear component 404 for generating statistics used in the adaptation process; and an adaptation component 406 for computing changes in the values of the unmixing parameters, ΔW and Δv.

    [0018] As will now be described in greater detail, the BSS processor 400 continuously adapts two state variables: the 2 by 2 unmixing matrix W, and the 2 by 1 bias vector b. The unmixing component 402 buffers the most recent N samples input to BSS processor 400. It computes the output z corresponding to the most recent input sample x by using the current values of the parameters W. These parameters are initialized with small random values at the beginning of the process (while v=0):



    [0019] The nonlinear component 404 transforms the output of the system using an invertible mapping. The objective of component 404 is to avoid processing very large numeric values of the outputs, which may be infinities from a computational point of view. This objective is carried out by processing statistically equivalent quantities, obtained after running the outputs z through the invertible mapping. An example of a nonlinear transformation used in component 404 is the sigmoidal nonlinearity y, defined below, taking as arguments z translated with v over the input buffer.



    [0020] The adaptation component 406 determines changes in the unmixing parameters W and v: i.e., ΔW and Δv. The objective is to maximize the mutual information that the outputs y contain about the inputs x, as well known to those skilled in this technology, and as described, for example by A.J. Bell and T.J. Sejnowski in their article entitled "An information-maximization approach to blind separation and blind deconvolution" published in Neural Computation, 7:1129-1159, 1995, and as also described in Bell's US patent 5,706,402. This objective reduces to a condition on the joint entropy H=H(y1,y2) of the outputs y:





    [0021] The resulting adaptations rules are modified to perform a "natural gradient" step known by those skilled in this technology, such as described by S. Amari in his publication entitled "Minimum mutual information blind separation, published in Neural Computation, 1996.

    [0022] We obtain the following update rules:





    [0023] A typical value for the learning rate η is 0.005.

    [0024] Referring again to Figure 1, following unmixer 18 is the postprocessing step 20, wherein a determination is made of which output estimate of unmixer 18 is more likely to represent voice rather than noise, as well as a normalization of the power of the outputs by scaling them to the level of the input powers. The output signal section can be based on multiple criteria using, for example, voice specific feature extraction and analysis, and/or dominant speaker detection, which can also be accomplished using feature extraction and analysis.

    [0025] As previously noted, in the illustrated embodiment of the present invention, the BSS processing is applied for use in hearing aids. The inputs to the system are given by two microphones which, with the present invention, can be situated very close to one another. In terms of the notation in the BSS processor shown in Figures 3 and 4, the system has two inputs and two ouputs (n=m=2).

    [0026] Particularly for the case of hearing aids, the present invention addresses the following problems:
    • It works with real world mixtures of signals in anechoic environments. The challenge is that a hearing aid using BSS would incorporate two microphones which, given the physical limitation imposed by in the ear hearing aids, may be less than 11 mm apart.
    • It can cope with more signals than the number of microphones. Until now, this was thought to be impossible since the existing theory behind BSS guarantees that a solution exists only when n>m.
    • It works under non-stationary mixing conditions in order to follow moving sources and adapt to changing listening environments.
    • It works in real time so that the user is not subjected to disconcerting delays in the signals and so that the hearing aid can adapt as necessary.


    [0027] Thus, there has been shown and described a novel method and apparatus for real-time unmixing of a desired signal from a mixture of independent signals. Many changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications of the subject invention will, however, become apparent to those skilled in the art after considering this specification and its accompanying drawings, which disclose a preferred embodiment thereof. For example, although pre- and post- BSS processors 16 and 18 are described, as noted herein, they are not strictly necessary in the broadest application of the present invention. Additionally, the various components of BSS processor 400 can be biased with a priori knowledge about the input signals to facilitate its operation, for example, knowledge about the distribution of the amplitude values of the source signals or even that one input signal represents speech. Furthermore, signal processing for enhancing source signal directionality can be incorporated into preprocessor 16. Even furthermore, the teaching of the present invention can be extremely useful for interference cancellation, separation of one voice from a mixture of many voices ("cocktail party" problem), and for preprocessing sound mixtures for noise reduction in order to allow further processing of a desired sound signal. x. All such changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications which do not depart from the teachings herein are deemed to be covered by this patent, which is limited only by the claims which follow as interpreted in light of the foregoing description.


    Claims

    1. A hearing aid (10) including an electronic filtering device for performing real-time unmixing of a signal desired to be recovered by a user of the device, where the desired signal emanates from one of a plurality of independent signal sources, the hearing aid comprising:

    A common housing with two microphones (12, 14) mounted therein, the common housing being for co-location with the ear of the user in use, and an adaptive unmixing signal processor (18), wherein:

    the two microphones (12, 14) are positioned along a common axis for developing first and second electrical input signals in response to reception by the microphones of acoustic signals from the plurality of independent signal sources, the spatial position of the common axis of the microphones being controllable in real time according to the direction in which the user looks when being attentive to a signal source, to align the common axis so that it substantially continuously points in the direction of the source of the desired signal when the user looks in the direction of the source; and wherein

    the adaptive unmixing signal processor (18) comprises a blind source signal separator responsive to said input signals for developing output signals in which the desired signal is separate from the mixture signal.


     
    2. The hearing aid of claim 1, further including a preprocessor (16) for modifying the input signals before they are applied to the unmixing signal processor.
     
    3. The hearing aid of claim 2, wherein the preprocessor (16) introduces a relative delay between components of the input signals.
     
    4. The hearing aid of claim2 or 3, wherein the preprocessor (16) subjects the input signals to a decorrelation processing.
     
    5. The hearing aid of claim 1, further including a postprocessor (20) responsive to the output signals of the unmixing signal processor for selecting the desired signal for application to a signal reproduction device.
     
    6. The hearing aid of claim 1, wherein the blind source signal separator (18) comprises a neural network for performing an unsupervised learning process that operates to maximize the joint output entropy of the output signals.
     
    7. A method for performing real-time unmixing of a signal desired to be recovered by a user, where the desired signal emanates from one of a plurality of independent signal sources, the method comprising the following steps:

    positioning two microphones (12, 14) along a common axis, for developing first and second electrical input signals in response to reception by the microphones of acoustic signals from the plurality of independent signal sources, said positioning being such that the common axis of the microphones is controllable in real time by the user to align the common axis so that it substantially continuously points in the direction of the source of the desired signal by locating the common axis proximate the user in a manner so that it points in the direction that the user is looking; and

    subjecting said input signals to an adaptive unmixing signal processing using blind source signal separation processing for developing output signals wherein the desired signal is separated from the mixture signal.


     
    8. The method of claim 7, wherein said positioning locates the common axis on a common housing that is intended to be co-located with the ear of the user.
     
    9. The method of claim 7, further including a preprocessing step for modifying the input signals before they are subjected to the unmixing signal processing.
     
    10. The method of claim 9, wherein the preprocessor step introduces a relative delay between the input signals.
     
    11. The method of claim 9 or 10, wherein the preprocessing step subjects the relatively delayed input signals to decorrelation processing.
     
    12. The method of claim 11, wherein the decorrelation processing step is carried out by a diagonalization of a correlation matrix formed using the relatively delayed input signals.
     
    13. The method of claim 7, further including a postprocessing step responsive to the output signals of the unmixing signal processing step for selecting the desired signal for application to a signal reproduction device.
     
    14. The method of claim 7, wherein the blind source signal separation processing comprises an unsupervised learning process that operates to maximize the joint output entropy of the output signals.
     


    Ansprüche

    1. Hörhilfegerät (10), umfassend eine elektronische Filtervorrichtung zum Ausführen einer Echtzeit-Entmischung eines Signals, von dem der Verwender des Geräts wünscht, dass es wiederhergestellt wird, wobei des gewünschte Signal aus einer aus einer Mehrzahl unabhängiger Signalquellen stammt, das Hörhilfegerät umfassend
    ein gemeinsames Gehäuse mit zwei darin angebrachten Mikrofonen (12, 14), wobei das gemeinsame Gehäuse bei Verwendung für gemeinsame Anordnung mit dem Ohr des Verwenders ausgelegt ist, und einen anpassbaren Signalentmischungsprozessor (18), wobei
    die zwei Mikrophone (12, 14) entlang einer gemeinsamen Achse angeordnet sind zum Entwickeln eines ersten und eines zweiten elektrischen Eingabesignals als Reaktion auf den Empfang durch die Mikrophone von akustischen Signalen aus der Mehrzahl unabhängiger Signalquellen, wobei die räumliche Position der gemeinsamen Achse der Mikrophone in Echtzeit steuerbar ist gemäß der Richtung, in welche der Verwender schaut, wenn er auf eine Signalquelle aufmerksam ist, um die gemeinsame Achse so auszurichten, dass sie im Wesentlichen durchgängig in die Richtung der Quelle des gewünschten Signals zeigt, wenn der Verwender in die Richtung des Signals schaut; und wobei
    der anpassbare Signalentmischungsprozessor (18) einen Blindquellen-Signalseparator umfasst, der auf die Eingabesignale reagiert zum Entwickeln von Ausgabesignalen, in welchen das gewünschte Signal getrennt vom Mischungssignal ist.
     
    2. Hörhilfegerät gemäß Anspruch 1, zudem umfassend einen Vorprozessor (16) zum Modofizieren der Eingabesignale, bevor sie den Signalentmischungsprozessor durchlaufen.
     
    3. Hörhilfegerät gemäß Anspruch 2, wobei der Vorprozessor (16) eine relative Verzögerung zwischen den Bestandteilen des Eingabesignals einführt.
     
    4. Hörhilfegerät gemäß Anspruch 2 oder 3, wobei der Vorprozessor (16) die Eingabesignale einer Entkorrelationsbearbeitung unterzieht.
     
    5. Hörhilfegerät gemäß Anspruch 1, zudem umfassend eine Nachprozessor (20), der auf die Ausgabesignale des Signalentmischungsprozessors reagiert zum Auswählen des gewünschten Signals zur Anwendung auf eine Signalwiedergabevorrichtung.
     
    6. Hörhilfegerät gemäß Anspruch 1, wobei der Blindquellen-Signalseparator (18) ein neurales Netzwerk umfasst zum Ausführen eines nicht überwachten Lernvorgangs, der so arbeitet, dass er die kombinierte Ausgangsentropie der Ausgangssignale maximiert.
     
    7. Verfahren zum Ausführen einer Echtzeit-Entmischung eines Signals, von dem ein Verwender wünscht, dass es wiederhergestellt wird, wobei des gewünschte Signal aus einer aus einer Mehrzahl unabhängiger Signalquellen stammt, das Verfahren umfassend die folgenden Schritte
    Anordnen zweier Mikrophone (12, 14) entlang einer gemeinsamen Achse zum Entwickeln eines ersten und eines zweiten Eingabesignals als Reaktion auf den Empfang durch die Mikrophone von akustischen Signalen aus der Mehrzahl unabhängiger Signalquellen, wobei das Anordnen so erfolgt, dass die gemeinsame Achse der Mikrophone in Echtzeit durch den Verwender steuerbar ist zum Ausrichten der gemeinsamen Achse so, dass sie im Wesentlichen durchgängig in die Richtung der Quelle des gewünschten Signals zeigt durch Anordnen der gemeinsamen Achse in der Nähe des Verwenders in einer Weise, dass sie in die Richtung zeigt, in die der Verwender schaut; und
    Unterwerfen der Eingangssignale einer anpassbaren Entmischungssignalbearbeitung durch Blindquellensignaltrennungsbearbeitung zum Entwickeln von Ausgabesignalen, wobei das gewünschte Signal vom Mischsignal getrennt wird.
     
    8. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei durch das Anordnen die gemeinsame Achse auf einem gemeinsamen Gehäuse angeordnet wird, welches sich am selben Ort wie das Ohr des Verwenders befinden soll.
     
    9. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 7, zudem umfassend einen Vorbearbeitungsschritt zum Modifizieren der Eingangssignale, bevor es die Entmischungssignal-Bearbeitung durchläufen.
     
    10. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 9, wobei der Vorbearbeitungsschritt eine relative Verzögerung zwischen den Bestandteilen des Eingabesignals einführt.
     
    11. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 9 oder 10, wobei der Vorbearbeitungsschritt die relativ verzögerten Eingabesignale einer Entkorrelationsbearbeitung unterzieht.
     
    12. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 11, wobei der Schritt der Entkorrelationsbearbeitung ausgeführt wird durch Diagonalisierung einer mit den relativ verzögerten Eingabesignalen gebildeten Korrelationsmatrix.
     
    13. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 7, zudem umfassend einen Nachbearbeitungsschritt als Reaktion auf die Ausgabesignale des Signalentmischungsbearbeitungsschritts zum Auswählen des gewünschten Signals zur Anwendung auf eine Signalwiedergabevorrichtung.
     
    14. Verfahren gemäß Anspruch 7, wobei die Blindquellensignaltrennungsbearbeitung umfasst einen nicht überwachten Lernvorgang, der so arbeitet, dass er die kombinierte Ausgangsentropie der Ausgangssignale maximiert.
     


    Revendications

    1. Prothèse auditive (10) incluant un dispositif de filtrage électronique pour effectuer le démixage en temps réel d'un signal qu'un utilisateur du dispositif souhaite récupérer, où le signal souhaité émane de l'une d'une pluralité de sources de signaux indépendantes, la prothèse auditive comprenant :

    un logement commun avec deux microphones (12, 14) montés à l'intérieur, le logement commun étant destiné à être partagé avec l'oreille de l'utilisateur en cours d'utilisation, et un processeur de signaux par démixage adaptatif (18), dans laquelle :

    les deux microphones (12, 14) sont positionnés le long d'un axe commun pour développer des premier et second signaux d'entrée électriques en réponse à la réception par les microphones de signaux acoustiques de la pluralité de sources de signaux indépendantes, la position spatiale de l'axe commun des microphones étant contrôlable en temps réel selon la direction dans laquelle l'utilisateur regarde lorsqu'il est attentif à une source de signaux, pour aligner l'axe commun afin qu'il pointe de façon sensiblement continue dans la direction de la source du signal souhaité lorsque l'utilisateur regarde dans la direction de la source ; et dans laquelle

    le processeur de signaux par démixage adaptatif (18) comprend un séparateur aveugle de signaux de source réceptif auxdits signaux d'entrée pour développer des signaux de sortie dans lesquels le signal souhaité est séparé du signal mélangé.


     
    2. Prothèse auditive selon la revendication 1, comprenant en outre un préprocesseur (16) pour modifier les signaux d'entrée avant qu'ils soient appliqués au processeur de signaux par démixage.
     
    3. Prothèse auditive selon la revendication 2, dans laquelle le préprocesseur (16) introduit un retard relatif entre les composantes des signaux d'entrée.
     
    4. Prothèse auditive selon la revendication 2 ou 3, dans laquelle le préprocesseur (16) soumet les signaux d'entrée à un traitement de décorrélation.
     
    5. Prothèse auditive selon la revendication 1, comprenant en outre un postprocesseur (20) réceptif aux signaux de sortie du processeur de signaux par démixage pour sélectionner le signal souhaité pour application à un dispositif de reproduction de signal.
     
    6. Prothèse auditive selon la revendication 1, dans laquelle le séparateur aveugle de signaux de source (18) comprend un réseau neuronal pour effectuer un processus d'apprentissage non supervisé qui sert à maximiser l'entropie en sortie jointe des signaux de sortie.
     
    7. Procédé pour effectuer un démixage en temps réel d'un signal qu'un utilisateur souhaite récupérer, où le signal souhaité émane de l'une d'une pluralité de sources de signaux indépendantes, le procédé comprenant les étapes suivantes :

    le positionnement de deux microphones (12, 14) le long d'un axe commun, pour développer des premier et second signaux d'entrée électriques en réponse à la réception par les microphones de signaux acoustiques de la pluralité de sources de signaux indépendantes, ledit positionnement étant tel que l'axe commun des microphones est contrôlable en temps réel par l'utilisateur pour aligner l'axe commun afin qu'il pointe de façon sensiblement continue dans la direction de la source du signal souhaité en plaçant l'axe commun à proximité de l'utilisateur d'une manière telle qu'il pointe dans la direction dans laquelle l'utilisateur regarde ; et

    la soumission desdits signaux d'entrée à un traitement de signal par démixage adaptatif en utilisant un processus de séparation aveugle de signaux sources pour développer des signaux de sortie dans lesquels le signal souhaité est séparé du signal en mélange.


     
    8. Procédé selon la revendication 7, dans lequel ledit positionnement place l'axe commun sur un logement commun qui est censé être partagé avec l'oreille de l'utilisateur.
     
    9. Procédé selon la revendication 7, comprenant en outre une étape de prétraitement pour modifier les signaux d'entrée avant qu'ils ne soient soumis au traitement de signaux par démixage.
     
    10. Procédé selon la revendication 9, dans lequel l'étape de prétraitement introduit un retard relatif entre les signaux d'entrée.
     
    11. Procédé selon la revendication 9 ou 10, dans lequel l'étape de prétraitement soumet les signaux d'entrée relativement retardés à un traitement de décorrélation.
     
    12. Procédé selon la revendication 11, dans lequel l'étape de traitement de décorrélation est effectuée par une diagonalisation d'une matrice de corrélation formée en utilisant les signaux d'entrée relativement retardés.
     
    13. Procédé selon la revendication 7, comprenant en outre une étape de post-traitement réceptive aux signaux de sortie de l'étape de traitement de signaux par démixage pour sélectionner le signal souhaité pour application à un dispositif de reproduction de signal.
     
    14. Procédé selon la revendication 7, dans lequel le processus de séparation aveugle de signaux sources comprend un processus d'apprentissage non supervisé qui sert à maximiser l'entropie en sortie jointe des signaux de sortie.
     




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    Cited references

    REFERENCES CITED IN THE DESCRIPTION



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    Patent documents cited in the description