Abstract

Suppressing unstable acoustic feedback in hearing aids will first require knowledge of the open-loop transfer functions of such systems. Reported herein is a mathematical technique for simulating the open-loop transfer function of an in situ eyeglass-type hearing aid. In particular, a computer program was developed that characterized the hearing aid as a serial connection of two-port blocks, each representing one individual component of a hearing aid. Included, for example, were two-port blocks representing the microphone, amplifier, receiver, sound tubes leading to the eardrum (including the ear canal itself), earmold vent, and external pathway from the vent outlet back to the microphone. The computer program was validated by replicating laboratory data derived from an experiment involving a nonstandard manikin fitted with a nonstandard artificial ear. Next, the open-loop transfer function of an eyeglass-type hearing aid in situ on the manikin was simulated via the computer program. Unfortunately, those computer-generated data were not replicated in the laboratory due to the difficulty encountered in actually measuring the open-loop transfer function. Nevertheless, investigators were able to utilize those data to predict, within +/- 25 Hz, the "squeal" frequency of unstable acoustic feedback.

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