Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byWinfred Grant Modified over 9 years ago
2
The Intersection of Hearing Science And Hearing Technology Brent Edwards, Ph.D. Executive Director Starkey Hearing Research Center Berkeley, CA
3
The Current State of Hearing Aids 91% have Digital Signal Processing
5
Digital Tech Multiband compression Feedback cancellation Noise reduction Environment Classification Datalogging Automatic features Echo reduction
6
Digital Tech Multiband compression Feedback cancellation Noise reduction Environment Classification Datalogging Automatic features Echo reduction Other Technologies Directional Microphones Wireless connectivity Design innovation Nanotech applications Rechargeable batteries
7
Hybrid Electric-Acoustic Devices Med-El
8
Digital Tech Multiband compression Feedback cancellation Noise reduction Environment Classification Datalogging Automatic features Echo reduction Other Technologies Directional Microphones Wireless connectivity Design innovation Nanotech applications Rechargeable batteries
10
Change Blindness
12
Perceptual Science will lead the development of the next hearing aid advances
13
Starkey Hearing Research Center Created in 2004 as a Translational Research Center Academic-type scientific environment for industry-related research
14
Focus research on: Speech communication Access to environmental and other non-speech sounds Spatial hearing Selective attention Stuart Gatehouse
15
Loss of environmental awareness leads to stress and anxiety. Listening is not passive. Relaxing is hard to do. Loss of environmental awareness leads to stress and anxiety. Listening is not passive. Relaxing is hard to do. Portis, 2005
17
Hearing loss can cause memory problems and other cognitive deficits McCoy et al., 2005
19
Pre-attentive object feature formation harmonicity timbre localization common modulation Selective attention Cocktail Party Phenomenon
20
Pre-attentive object feature formation harmonicity timbre localization common modulation Selective attention Cocktail Party Phenomenon
21
Vowel Segregation Humans can hear two concurrent vowels when pitches differ /i//a//i,a/ Summerfield and Assman, 1991
22
/i//a//i,a/ i: f0=100 Hz a: f0=100 Hz Vowel Segregation Humans can hear two concurrent vowels when pitches differ Summerfield and Assman, 1991
23
/i//a//i,a/ i: f0=100 Hz a: f0=126 Hz Vowel Segregation Humans can hear two concurrent vowels when pitches differ Summerfield and Assman, 1991
24
Project 1: Binaural Hearing Sridhar Kalluri, SHRC Research Question: What is the impact of hearing aids on binaural perception?
25
What we know: Easier to understand target speech if other talkers are at different locations
26
Target speech Masker/interferer Difficult to understand speech
27
Target speech Masker/interferer Easier to understand speech
28
Spatial separation benefits normal hearing listeners Spatial separation benefits normal hearing listeners Spatial Separation Low Lower Is Better High Unaided Speech Threshold
29
Hearing aids can reduce benefit of spatial separation Hearing aids can reduce benefit of spatial separation Spatial Separation LowHigh Lower Is Better Aided Unaided Speech Threshold
30
Hearing loss reduces benefit from spatial separation Hearing loss reduces benefit from spatial separation Normal hearing Hearing loss Lower Is Better Spatial Separation LowHigh Speech Threshold
31
Hearing loss and hearing aid technology can affect binaural benefit to speech understanding
32
Project 2: Listening Effort Collaboration with Dept. of Psychology, UC Berkeley Prof. Ervin Hafter hafter@berkeley.edu Anastasios Sarampalis asaram@berkeley.edu
33
Project 2: Listening Effort Research Question: Do hearing aids reduce listening Effort?
34
What we know: People have a limited capacity of attention/effort If more attention is applied to one task, less can be applied to another
35
Measure listening effort with a Dual-Task Paradigm
36
Experiment A: Effect of hearing aids on Driving
38
Listening to speech in noise makes driving worse
39
Adding directional technology makes driving better
40
Experiment B: Effect of hearing aids on memory
41
Directional technology improves memory Directional technology improves memory
42
Noise reduction technology improves memory Noise reduction technology improves memory
43
Experiment C: Effect of hearing aids on reaction time
44
Reaction Time Task
45
8
46
7
47
Directional technology improves reaction time Directional technology improves reaction time
48
Noise reduction technology improves reaction time Noise reduction technology improves reaction time
49
Hearing aid technology can reduce effort necessary to understand speech in noise
50
Conclusion Perceptual Science will play a strong role in technology development Cognition will be a focus of hearing impairment research and hearing aid R&D
51
Thank You Brent_edwards@starkey.com
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.