Development and evaluation of binaural and transcranial bone conduction stimulation on anatomic head simulator
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Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
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Sammanfattning
Previous research has demonstrated that patients with bone conduction hearing loss can
benefit from binaural fitting using bone conduction hearing devices [1]. However, certain
limitations persist due to the complex vibrational patterns that arise from multiple
transmission pathways within the complex skull. Notably, transcranial attenuation (TA)
below 1 kHz has been reported to be approximately 0 dB SPL, with higher attenuation
towards higher frequencies, allowing sound energy to propagate across the skull and
stimulate both cochleae simultaneously [2].
To investigate a more realistic perception of different sound scenarios with bone conduction
hearing aids, a specialized head simulator was developed by Cochlear Bone Anchored Solutions AB,
modeled after a human skull and equipped with three-dimensional
accelerometers positioned at the cochlear locations. This Master’s thesis aimed to enable
real-time audio playback from bone conduction hearing aids and simulate binaural fittings.
To achieve this, digital signal processing was applied, a vector projection of the axis
onto the excitation force was performed, and filters were designed to align the output with
the air conduction threshold. Finally, a listening experiment involving 37 normal-hearing
participants was conducted to evaluate the simulator’s performance. Speech reception
thresholds (SRTs) in noise were measured using the standardized Swedish Matrix (Hagerman)
test, and binaural intelligibility level differences (BILD) were calculated to assess
participants’ ability to utilize spatial cues during headphone-based listening. Four test
conditions were evaluated, involving co-located sources as well as configurations with
speech presented from the front and noise positions at 270° azimuth. Measurements were
conducted with both one and two BAHIs attached.
Initial measurements confirmed that transcranial attenuation (TA) values are consistent with
literature findings, showing minimal attenuation below 1 kHz and increasing
at higher frequencies. The resulting speech reception threshold (SRT) scores revealed a
systematic shift of approximately 3 dB toward better signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) compared
to previous studies. An ILD and BILD of approximately 3.6 dB SPL confirmed
the simulator’s ability to reliably replicate binaural hearing.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
Bone conduction, binaural fitting, transcranial attenuation, Head Simulator, Digital Signal Processing, Speech Reception Threshold, BILD
