Listening to Music Through Hearing Aids: Potential Lessons for Cochlear Implants.
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Authors
Publication Date
2022Journal Title
Trends Hear
ISSN
2331-2165
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
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Show full item recordCitation
Moore, B. C. (2022). Listening to Music Through Hearing Aids: Potential Lessons for Cochlear Implants.. Trends Hear https://doi.org/10.1177/23312165211072969
Abstract
Some of the problems experienced by users of hearing aids (HAs) when listening to music are relevant to cochlear implants (CIs). One problem is related to the high peak levels (up to 120 dB SPL) that occur in live music. Some HAs and CIs overload at such levels, because of the limited dynamic range of the microphones and analogue-to-digital converters (ADCs), leading to perceived distortion. Potential solutions are to use 24-bit ADCs or to include an adjustable gain between the microphones and the ADCs. A related problem is how to squeeze the wide dynamic range of music into the limited dynamic range of the user, which can be only 6-20 dB for CI users. In HAs, this is usually done via multi-channel amplitude compression (automatic gain control, AGC). In CIs, a single-channel front-end AGC is applied to the broadband input signal or a control signal derived from a running average of the broadband signal level is used to control the mapping of the channel envelope magnitude to an electrical signal. This introduces several problems: (1) an intense narrowband signal (e.g. a strong bass sound) reduces the level for all frequency components, making some parts of the music harder to hear; (2) the AGC introduces cross-modulation effects that can make a steady sound (e.g. sustained strings or a sung note) appear to fluctuate in level. Potential solutions are to use several frequency channels to create slowly varying gain-control signals and to use slow-acting (or dual time-constant) AGC rather than fast-acting AGC.
Keywords
automatic gain control, cochlear implants, compression speed, dynamic range, hearing aids, music, Auditory Perception, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants, Hearing Aids, Humans, Music, Speech Perception
Sponsorship
MRC
Funder references
Medical Research Council (G0701870)
Medical Research Council (G8717539)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/23312165211072969
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331745
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