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Update on Historical Milestones in Audiology

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Title: Update on Historical Milestones in Audiology


1
Update on Historical Milestones in Audiology
Hearing Aids
  • Ruth Bentler
  • With a little help from my friend, Jim Jerger
  • May 29, 2008

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1922
  • First commercial audiometer
  • Western Electric 1-A
  • Harvey Fletcher

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1922
  • The audiogram form as we know it today.

Edmund Prince Fowler
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1939
  • First book on clinical audiometry
  • Cordia C Bunch

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1946
  • Speech
  • audiometry
  • Raymond Carhart

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1960
  • Bekesy
  • audiometry
  • James Jerger

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1962
  • First infant screening program
  • Marian Downs

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1970
  • Impedance audiometry
  • James Jerger

Madsen ZO61
Madsen ZO70
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1971
The Auditory Brain Stem Response
(ABR) Donald Jewett
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1974
  • Pediatric
  • applications
  • ABR
  • Kurt Hecox Robert Galambos

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Some Audiological Pioneers
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Some Hearing Aid Milestones
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First published accounts
  • Pre-electric (prior to 1900)
  • Deaf aids
  • Deaf instruments
  • Speaking tubes (or trumpets)
  • Hearing tubes (or trumpets)
  • Manufacturers
  • Frederick Charles Rein Co (1800-1963)
  • T. Hawksley Ltd of London (1869)
  • George P. Pilling Sons (1814)
  • etc

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First Electric
  • 1900
  • Big
  • Poor frequency
  • response

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First programmable
  • 1988 (also beginning of multi-memories,
    multi-channels, remotes, etc)
  • Bentler (1992) American Journal of Audiology

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First digital
  • 1995
  • Oticon/Widex
  • (Harnack-Knebel Bentler, 1998, Ear Hearing)

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First (and only) disposable
  • 1998
  • Songbird
  • Poor design
  • Analog OR Digital

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First signal processor to correct hearing
  • Still waiting.

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New (useful) technologies
  • Open fittings (plus RITE)
  • Directional Microphones
  • Digital Noise Reduction
  • Feedback management
  • Data logging
  • Data learning

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Open Fitting (or Open Fitting?)
  • Starkey Aspect XtraTM
  • Sonic Innovations ionTM
  • GN Resound (were sending our competitors back
    to the drawing board) AirTM, PulseTM
  • MicroTech SenecaTM
  • Oticons Corda tubing option for
  • Synchro
  • Tego, Tego Pro
  • Bernafon SwissEarTM
  • Unitron ModaTM
  • Widex Inteo elan TM

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How is it that we now do better?
  • Feedback cancellation
  • Broader bandwidth
  • New market

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Directional Microphones
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Quick Tutorial
  • Ways to build directivity into a hearing aid
    case
  • Single mic with two ports
  • Two omni mics
  • Combination of omni directional mics
  • Three mics
  • Mic array

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Directional Microphone
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Reading a Polar Plot
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OmniDirectional Microphone
Polar plot for omnidirectional mic in free field
Level of signal
Angle of signal source
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Polar Response Pattern
Free field characteristics of different types of
microphones (Knowles TB 21)
Omnidirectional Cardioid Hypercardioid
Supercardioid
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Directional Microphones
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Analog NR (1980-90s)
  • Early spectral approaches
  • Switch
  • ASP (means low frequency compression)
  • Adaptive filtering
  • Frequency dependant input compression
  • Adaptive compressionTM
  • Zeta Noise BlockerTM

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Todays versions
  • Most are modulation-based with some algorithm for
    where and how much gain reduction should occur
  • At least one other (Oticon) first introduced a
    strategy called synchronous morphology to
    determine when noise reduction will occur
  • Several are now implementing Wiener filters as
    well
  • Many also use some mic noise reduction,
    expansion, wind noise reduction, and even
    directional mics as part of the strategy they
    promote.

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New (not-so-useful?) features
  • Talking hearing aids
  • Talk to person wearing aid
  • Talk to each other
  • In many languages!
  • Complex remote controls
  • Sometimes necessary, eg Bluetooth
  • Not useful for young and old

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  • Questions?
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