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Title: Multimicrophone adaptive beamforming for interference reduction in hearing aids. Author: Peterson PM, Durlach NI, Rabinowitz WM, Zurek PM. Journal: J Rehabil Res Dev; 1987; 24(4):103-10. PubMed ID: 3430369. Abstract: To reduce interference in monaural hearing aids from sound sources that are spatially separated from a target source, we are investigating methods for combining information from multiple microphones. In this paper, we describe an adaptive beamforming method that functions to preserve target signals arriving from straight-ahead of a microphone array while minimizing output power from off-axis interference sources. In a preliminary evaluation of a two-microphone system, sentence intelligibility tests were administered to normal-hearing subjects using processed and unprocessed materials from simulated environments in which the target was on-axis, the interference (speech babble) was 45 degrees off-axis, and the reverberation mimicked that of a living room, a conference room, and anechoic space. Compared to listening through a single microphone, the two-microphone beamformer reduced the target-to-interference ratio required to achieve 50 percent keyword intelligibility by 30, 14, and 0 dB in the anechoic, living-room, and conference-room conditions, respectively. The corresponding improvements over binaural listening (one microphone to each ear) were 24, 9, and 0 dB. Further tests in the living-room environment using the same beam-forming system but with filter impulse responses shortened by a factor of four (which would decrease the adaptation time by a factor of four) decreased the improvement by 5 dB. These results are sufficiently encouraging to warrant further tests involving more realistic reverberant conditions, multiple sources of interference, and time-varying acoustic environments.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]