• DocumentCode
    3068472
  • Title

    Advantages of cartilage sound conduction in hearing aids

  • Author

    Shimokura, Ryota ; Matsui, Toshie ; Nishimura, Tadashi ; Hosoi, Hiroshi

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Otorhinolaryngology-Head & Neck Surg., Nara Med. Univ., Kashihara, Japan
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    1-4 July 2012
  • Firstpage
    134
  • Lastpage
    141
  • Abstract
    A cartilage conduction hearing aid has been developed for patients who cannot use conventional hearing aids owing to particular diseases of the external or middle ear. A user of such a hearing aid places the ring-shaped transducer gently at the entrance of the external auditory canal, so that it does not cause any feeling of discomfort. The cartilage conduction transducer vibrates the aural cartilage of the user, and the transmitted vibration generates sound in the external auditory canal, particularly in the low and middle-frequency ranges. In this regard, the cartilage conduction hearing aid has a different principle of sound transmission from conventional hearing aids. In this study, the performance and possible advantages of cartilage sound conduction in hearing aids were examined. This was achieved through two experiments focusing on important indicators: (i) the susceptibility toward acoustic feedback compared with air sound conduction and (ii) the ability of the user to realize sound directivity during binaural use of the cartilage conduction hearing aid. It was found that cartilage conduction was less susceptible to acoustic feedback than air conduction through an open-fitting earplug, even though both the cartilage conduction transducer and the open-fitting earplug keep the external auditory canal open. With respect to the second experiment, the binaural use of cartilage conduction transducers was found to facilitate subjective lateralization for users when examined using the interaural intensity difference (IID) cue. These results show that the cartilage conduction hearing aid has distinct advantages over the conventional air conduction hearing aid in terms of the robustness against the acoustic feedback and effective binaural use. Although the cartilage conduction hearing aid was once considered merely an expedient alternative for patients suffering from particular diseases, the advantages highlighted in the present study may attract patients with mild a- d moderate hearing loss, who are currently using air conduction hearing aids.
  • Keywords
    biomechanics; hearing; hearing aids; vibrations; acoustic feedback susceptibility; air sound conduction comparison; aural cartilage; cartilage conduction hearing aid; cartilage conduction transducer; cartilage sound conduction; effective binaural use; external auditory canal; external ear diseases; hearing aids; interaural intensity difference cue; middle ear diseases; open fitting earplug; ring shaped transducer; sound directivity; sound generation; sound transmission principle; transmitted vibration; Auditory system; Bones; Ear; Fitting; Irrigation; Transducers; Vibrations; acoustic feedback; binaural use; cartilage conduction; hearing aid;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Complex Medical Engineering (CME), 2012 ICME International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Kobe
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-1617-0
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICCME.2012.6275601
  • Filename
    6275601