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On the interaction of head and gaze control with acoustic beam width of a simulated beamformer in a two-talker scenario

Hl�dek, ?ubo�; Porr, Bernd; Naylor, Graham; Lunner, Thomas; Owen Brimijoin, W.

On the interaction of head and gaze control with acoustic beam width of a simulated beamformer in a two-talker scenario Thumbnail


Authors

?ubo� Hl�dek

Bernd Porr

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GRAHAM NAYLOR GRAHAM.NAYLOR@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Professor of Hearing Sciences

Thomas Lunner

W. Owen Brimijoin



Abstract

Superdirectional acoustic beamforming technology provides a high signal-to-noise ratio, but potential speech intelligibility benefits to hearing aid users are limited by the way the users move their heads. Steering the beamformer using eye gaze instead of head orientation could mitigate this problem. This study investigated the intelligibility of target speech with a dynamically changing direction when heard through gaze-controlled (GAZE) or head-controlled (HEAD) superdirectional simulated beamformers. The beamformer provided frequency-independent noise attenuation of either 8 dB (WIDE [moderately directional]) or 12 dB (NARROW [highly directional]) relative to no beamformer referred as the OMNI (omni-directional) condition. Before the main experiment, signal-to-noise ratios were normalized for each participant and each beam width condition to yield equal percentage of correct performance in a reference condition. Hence, results are presented as normalized speech intelligibility (NSI). In an ongoing presentation, the participants (n = 17), of varying degree of hearing loss, heard single-word targets every 1.5 s coming from either left (−30°) or right (+30°) presented in continuous, spatially distributed, speech-shaped noise. When the target was static, NSI was better in the GAZE than in the HEAD condition, but only when the beam was NARROW. When the target switched location without warning, NSI performance dropped. In this case, the WIDE HEAD condition provided the best average NSI performance, because some participants tended to orient their head in between the targets, allowing them to hear out the target regardless of location. The difference in NSI between GAZE and HEAD conditions for individual participants was related to the observed head-orientation strategy, which varied widely across participants.

Citation

Hládek, Ľ., Porr, B., Naylor, G., Lunner, T., & Owen Brimijoin, W. (2019). On the interaction of head and gaze control with acoustic beam width of a simulated beamformer in a two-talker scenario. Trends in Hearing, 23, 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216519876795

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 24, 2019
Online Publication Date Sep 23, 2019
Publication Date 2019
Deposit Date Sep 9, 2019
Publicly Available Date Oct 7, 2019
Journal Trends in Hearing
Electronic ISSN 2331-2165
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 23
Pages 1-12
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216519876795
Keywords Hearing aids, Speech intelligibility, Head movements, Eye movements
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2591341
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2331216519876795

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