Brimijoin W Owen, Whitmer William M, McShefferty David, Akeroyd Michael A
MRC Institute of Hearing Research (Scottish Section), Glasgow Royal Infirmary, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, United Kingdom.
Ear Hear. 2014 Sep-Oct;35(5):e204-12. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000053.
Although directional microphones on a hearing aid provide a signal-to-noise ratio benefit in a noisy background, the amount of benefit is dependent on how close the signal of interest is to the front of the user. It is assumed that when the signal of interest is off-axis, users can reorient themselves to the signal to make use of the directional microphones to improve signal-to-noise ratio. The present study tested this assumption by measuring the head-orienting behavior of bilaterally fit hearing-impaired individuals with their microphones set to omnidirectional and directional modes. The authors hypothesized that listeners using directional microphones would have greater difficulty in rapidly and accurately orienting to off-axis signals than they would when using omnidirectional microphones.
The authors instructed hearing-impaired individuals to turn and face a female talker in simultaneous surrounding male-talker babble. Participants pressed a button when they felt they were accurately oriented in the direction of the female talker. Participants completed three blocks of trials with their hearing aids in omnidirectional mode and three blocks in directional mode, with mode order randomized. Using a Vicon motion tracking system, the authors measured head position and computed fixation error, fixation latency, trajectory complexity, and proportion of misorientations.
Results showed that for larger off-axis target angles, listeners using directional microphones took longer to reach their targets than they did when using omnidirectional microphones, although they were just as accurate. They also used more complex movements and frequently made initial turns in the wrong direction. For smaller off-axis target angles, this pattern was reversed, and listeners using directional microphones oriented more quickly and smoothly to the targets than when using omnidirectional microphones.
The authors argue that an increase in movement complexity indicates a switch from a simple orienting movement to a search behavior. For the most off-axis target angles, listeners using directional microphones appear to not know which direction to turn, so they pick a direction at random and simply rotate their heads until the signal becomes more audible. The changes in fixation latency and head orientation trajectories suggest that the decrease in off-axis audibility is a primary concern in the use of directional microphones, and listeners could experience a loss of initial target speech while turning toward a new signal of interest. If hearing-aid users are to receive maximum directional benefit in noisy environments, both adaptive directionality in hearing aids and clinical advice on using directional microphones should take head movement and orientation behavior into account.
尽管助听器上的定向麦克风在嘈杂背景下能提供信噪比优势,但优势的大小取决于感兴趣的信号与使用者前方的距离。假定当感兴趣的信号处于非轴向时,使用者能够重新调整自身朝向信号,以利用定向麦克风提高信噪比。本研究通过测量双侧佩戴助听器的听力受损个体在将麦克风设置为全向模式和定向模式时的头部定向行为,对这一假设进行了测试。作者假设,与使用全向麦克风时相比,使用定向麦克风的听众在快速准确地转向非轴向信号时会遇到更大困难。
作者指示听力受损个体在周围有男性交谈声的同时转向并面对一名女性交谈者。当参与者感觉自己已准确朝向女性交谈者的方向时,按下按钮。参与者在助听器处于全向模式下完成三个试验组,在定向模式下完成三个试验组,模式顺序随机。作者使用Vicon运动跟踪系统测量头部位置,并计算注视误差、注视潜伏期、轨迹复杂度和错误定向比例。
结果表明,对于较大的非轴向目标角度,使用定向麦克风的听众到达目标的时间比使用全向麦克风时更长,尽管他们同样准确。他们还使用了更复杂的动作,并且经常一开始转向错误的方向。对于较小的非轴向目标角度,这种模式则相反,使用定向麦克风的听众比使用全向麦克风时更快、更平稳地转向目标。
作者认为,动作复杂度的增加表明从简单的定向动作转变为搜索行为。对于最大的非轴向目标角度,使用定向麦克风的听众似乎不知道该转向哪个方向,所以他们随机选择一个方向,简单地转动头部直到信号变得更清晰可闻。注视潜伏期和头部定向轨迹的变化表明,非轴向可听度的降低是使用定向麦克风时的一个主要问题,并且听众在转向新的感兴趣信号时可能会错过最初的目标语音。如果助听器使用者要在嘈杂环境中获得最大的定向优势,助听器的自适应方向性以及关于使用定向麦克风的临床建议都应考虑头部运动和定向行为。