Abstract

Earables (in-ear wearables) are gaining increasing attention for sensing applications and healthcare research thanks to their ergonomy and non-invasive nature. However, air leakages between the device and the user's ear, resulting from daily activities or wearing variabilities, can decrease the performance of applications, interfere with calibrations, and reduce the robustness of the overall system. Existing literature lacks established methods for estimating the degree of air leaks (i.e., seal integrity) to provide information for the earable applications. In this work, we proposed a novel unobtrusive method for estimating the air leakage level of earbuds based on an in-ear microphone. The proposed method aims to estimate the magnitude of distortions, reflections, and external noise in the ear canal while excluding the speaker output by learning the speaker-to-microphone transfer function which allows us to perform the task unobtrusively. Using the obtained residual signal in the ear canal, we extract three features and deploy a machine-learning model for estimating the air leakage level. We investigated our system under various conditions to validate its robustness and resilience against the motion and other artefacts. Our extensive experimental evaluation shows that the proposed method can track air leakage levels under different daily activities. "The best computer is a quiet, invisible servant." ~Mark Weiser

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