Title :
Evaluation of the Phase-Inversion Signal Separation Method When Using Nonlinear Hearing Aids
Author :
Ellaham, N. ; Giguere, Christian ; Gueaieb, Wail
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada
fDate :
4/1/2013 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Using two measurements with simultaneous speech and noise presentation, Hagerman and Olofsson have suggested a time-domain method to estimate the speech and noise signals at the output of a hearing device. The method, which uses a simple phase-inversion scheme, has gained popularity in hearing-aid research, although receiving only limited validation. In this work, we present an evaluation of this signal-separation method using simulated measurements with different hearing aids and listening conditions. Estimates of the speech and noise spectra from the phase-inversion method are compared to those obtained using the coherence function. New measures of speech and noise distortion are proposed as tools to evaluate the phase-inversion method. Additionally, we analyze the intelligibility predictions computed from the recovered spectral estimates, while accounting for the proposed speech distortion measure. Under additive-noise conditions, the phase-inversion method provides ideal signal separation without suffering any biases at low signal-to-noise ratios. For conditions involving automatic gain control, compressive output limiting, and peak clipping, the intelligibility predictions based on the phase-inversion method are found to agree with relevant findings from the literature.
Keywords :
hearing aids; medical signal processing; speech processing; time-domain analysis; additive-noise conditions; automatic gain control; hearing device; intelligibility predictions; noise distortion; noise presentation; noise signals; noise spectra; nonlinear hearing aids; phase-inversion signal separation method; signal-to-noise ratios; speech distortion; speech presentation; speech signals; speech spectra; time-domain method; Coherence; Distortion measurement; Noise; Nonlinear distortion; Speech; Speech processing; Auditory modeling and hearing aids; speech analysis; speech perception and psychoacoustics;
Journal_Title :
Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASL.2013.2238530