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Wind noise in hearing aids

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Presentation on theme: "Wind noise in hearing aids"— Presentation transcript:

1 Wind noise in hearing aids
Harvey Dillon, Richard Katsch, Inge Roe, National Acoustic Laboratories, Australian Hearing, With the support of GN Resound, Oticon, Phonak, & Widex

2 But why, and how, and how bad is the problem?
Wind + hearing aid = noise But why, and how, and how bad is the problem?

3 Turbulence f = US/L (Hz) L U S = Strouhal number

4 Spectrum of noise behind wire

5 Laser Doppler Velocimeter

6 Velocity down the wind tunnel (CIC aid)

7 Velocity out of head (CIC aid)

8 Velocity upwards (CIC aid)

9 Turbulent velocity (CIC aid)

10 Turbulent velocity (ITE aid)

11 Turbulent velocity (BTE aid)

12 Effect on turbulence of distance from head

13 Solution 1: Extend the microphones

14 Wind velocity inside and outside the concha

15 Turbulence in the concha
Tragus

16 Sensitivity of ITC Tragus

17 Smoothness of ITE Tragus

18 Noise measurements: Specially designed wind-tunnel.

19 Noise measurements: Outlet of Wind Tunnel

20 Noise measurements: Outlet of Wind Tunnel
z x y

21 Wind velocity 5 m/sec 18 km/hr 11 m.p.h.
Level 3 on 13 point Beaufort Scale Flags unfurl but droop Scattered whitecaps Gentle Breeze Exceeded 6% of time

22 Noise at BTE position

23 Aid comparison at 0 degrees

24 Aid comparison at 90 degrees

25 Aid comparison at -90 degrees

26 KEMAR at 0 degrees to wind

27 Aid comparison at 30 degrees

28 Aid comparison at 30 degrees

29 Solution 2:

30 Solution 2: Remove the pinnae

31 Solution 2: Remove the pinnae

32 ITE noise versus azimuth

33 KEMAR at -50 degrees to wind

34 Aid comparison at -50 degrees

35 Aid comparison at -50 degrees

36 Solution 3: Shed the vortices gracefully

37 ITE noise versus azimuth

38 KEMAR at -90 degrees to wind

39 Solution 4: Keep the aid towards the wind

40 ITE noise re CIC noise dB

41 ITE minus CIC

42 Factors affecting wind noise
Levels are very intense Obstacles (head, pinna, tragus) act as: Wind guards Turbulence source Turbulence shredder Large obstacles create low-freq turbulence head Medium obstacles create mid-freq turbulence pinna Small obstacles create high-freq turbulence tragus, inlet port

43 Other observations As wind speed increases:
noise levels increase frequency spectrum extends upward Two microphone ports produce: correlated noise if a common source (e.g. head or pinna) uncorrelated noise if separate sources (e.g. inlet port)

44 Potential solutions Wear one aid and orient the head Wear a scarf
Don’t fit a BTE Don’t fit a fixed directional microphone Low distortion input circuitry up to at least 110 dB SPL Low-cut filtering especially over the vent-transmitted range Smooth design Electronic signal processing from multiple microphones

45 That’s all Folks

46 For a copy of this talk, send an Email to:


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