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Digital
Hearing Instruments Fortunately, for both dispensing audiologists and patients, there are features
and advanced signal processing schemes available in current digital hearing
aids that do have significant advantages over those found in analog instruments.
Potential digital advantages include those related to:
Gain Processing. One of the primary benefits associated with flexible gain-processing
schemes is the potential for increased audibility of sounds of interest
without discomfort resulting from high intensity sounds. While this is
more generally a benefit of compression rather than digital processing
per se, the greatly increased flexibility and control of compression processing
provided by DSP--such as input signal-specific band dependence, greater
numbers of channels, and kneepoints with lower compression thresholds--can
lead to improved audibility with less clinician effort. Expansion, the
opposite of compression, has also been introduced in digital hearing aids.
This processing can lead to greater listener satisfaction by reducing the
intensity of low-level environmental sounds and microphone noise that otherwise
may have been annoying to the user.
Digital Feedback Reduction (DFR). The most advanced feedback reduction
schemes monitor for feedback while the listener is wearing the hearing
aid. Moderate feedback is then reduced or eliminated through the use of
a cancellation system or notch filtering. DFR can substantially benefit
users who experience occasional feedback, such as that associated with
jaw movement and close proximity to objects.
Digital Noise Reduction (DNR). This processing is intended to reduce gain,
either in the low frequencies or in specific bands, when steady-state signals
(noise) are detected. Although research findings supporting the efficacy
of DNR systems are mixed, they do indicate that the DNR can work to reduce
annoyance and possibly improve speech recognition in the presence of non-fluctuating
noise. DNR is sometimes advocated as complementary processing to directional
microphones. While directional microphones can reduce the levels of background
noise regardless of its temporal content, they are limited to reducing
noise from behind or to the sides of the user.
Digital Speech Enhancement (DSE). These systems act to increase the relative
intensity of some segments of speech. Current DSE processing identifies
and enhances speech based either on temporal, or more recently, spectral
content. DSE in hearing aids is still relatively new, and its effectiveness
is largely unknown.
Directional Microphones and DSP. The ability of directional hearing aids
to improve the effective signal-to-noise ratio provided to the listener
is now well established. In some cases, however, combining DSP with directional
microphones can act to further enhance this benefit. In some hearing aids,
DSP is used to calibrate microphones, control the shape of the directional
pattern, automatically switch between directional and omnidirectional modes,
and through expansion, reduce additional circuit noise generated by directional
microphones.
Digital Hearing Aids as Signal Generators. Since digital hearing aids have
a DSP at their heart, they are able to generate--as well as to process--sound.
Current digital hearing aids use this capability to perform loudness growth
and threshold testing in order to obtain fitting information specific to
an individual patient's ears in combination with a specific hearing aid.
Sound levels also can be verified through the hearing aid once it is fit.
This technology has the potential both to increase accuracy of hearing
aid fittings and potentially streamline the fitting process by reducing
the need for some external equipment.
Current digital hearing aids are certainly exciting, and the future possibilities
are endless. Before long, digital hearing aids will replace their analog
counterparts altogether. We must, however, present this technology to patients
in an informative and educational manner. Like many other high-tech devices,
high expectations often accompany digital hearing aids. Counseling patients
about appropriate expectations will continue to be more--not less--important
as technology continues to advance. Back
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