Abstract

In adaptive feedback cancellation the computational complexity and the convergence speed are determined by the number of adaptive parameters used to model the acoustic feedback path. Therefore it has been proposed to reduce the number of adaptive parameters by modeling the feedback path as the convolution of a time-invariant common part and a time-varying variable part. While previous approaches have modeled the common part either using only poles or using only zeros, in this paper we propose to use a common pole-zero model and present an iterative method to compute the common poles and zeros. Using measured acoustic feedback paths from a two-microphone behind-the-ear hearing aid it is shown that the proposed model enables either to increase the modeling accuracy given a fixed number of parameters of the variable part or to reduce the number of parameters of the variable part given a desired accuracy.

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