Title :
A Bio-Realistic Analog CMOS Cochlea Filter With High Tunability and Ultra-Steep Roll-Off
Author :
Shiwei Wang ; Koickal, Thomas Jacob ; Hamilton, Alister ; Cheung, Rebecca ; Smith, Leslie S.
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Integrated Micro & Nano Syst., Univ. of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
Abstract :
This paper presents the design and experimental results of a cochlea filter in analog very large scale integration (VLSI) which highly resembles physiologically measured response of the mammalian cochlea. The filter consists of three specialized sub-filter stages which respectively provide passive response in low frequencies, actively tunable response in mid-band frequencies and ultra-steep roll-off at transition frequencies from pass-band to stop-band. The sub-filters are implemented in balanced ladder topology using floating active inductors. Measured results from the fabricated chip show that wide range of mid-band tuning including gain tuning of over 20dB, Q factor tuning from 2 to 19 as well as the bio-realistic center frequency shift are achieved by adjusting only one circuit parameter. Besides, the filter has an ultra-steep roll-off reaching over 300 dB/dec. By changing biasing currents, the filter can be configured to operate with center frequencies from 31 Hz to 8 kHz. The filter is 9th order, consumes 59.5 ~ 90.0 μW power and occupies 0.9 mm2 chip area. A parallel bank of the proposed filter can be used as the front-end in hearing prosthesis devices, speech processors as well as other bio-inspired auditory systems owing to its bio-realistic behavior, low power consumption and small size.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; band-pass filters; band-stop filters; bio-inspired materials; cochlear implants; hearing; CMOS cochlea filter; Q factor tuning; actively tunable cochlea filter response; analog VLSI; analog cochlea filter; analog very-large-scale-integration; balanced ladder topology; biasing current; bioinspired auditory system; biorealistic center frequency shift; biorealistic cochlea filter; circuit parameter adjustment; cochlea filter biorealistic behavior; cochlea filter chip area; cochlea filter configuration; cochlea filter design; cochlea filter experimental result; cochlea filter power consumption; cochlea filter subfilter stage-provided passive response; cochlea filter ultra steep roll-off; cochlea filter-provided passive response; complementary metal oxide semiconductor cochlea filter; fabricated chip; floating active inductor; frequency 31.00 Hz to 8.00 Hz; gain 20.00 dB; gain 300.00 dB; gain tuning; hearing prosthesis device front-end; high cochlea filter tunability; low-frequency passive response; mammalian cochlea response; ninth-order filter; pass-band frequency; pass-to-stop band transition frequency; physiologically-measured cochlea response; power 59.50 muW to 90.00 muW; proposed filter parallel bank; specialized subfilter stage-provided passive response; speech processor device front-end; stop-band frequency; subfilter implementation; transition frequency ultra steep roll-off; tunable response midband frequency; wide midband tuning range; Band-pass filters; Biology; Frequency response; Topology; Transconductance; Transistors; Very large scale integration; Analog VLSI; CMOS cochlea; auditory filter; bio-inspired circuits; floating active inductor;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2014.2328321