Title: The Effect of Reverberation and Amplification on Sound Localisation
1The Effect of Reverberation and Amplification on
Sound Localisation
- Hadeel al Saleh
- Supervisors Dr.Stefan Bleeck, Prof.Mark Lutman
- 1st July. 2009
2Relation to Audiology
- Localisation is important in
- Quality of Speech perception
- Communication in background noise
- Safety
- Hearing aid and cochlear implant users have
difficulties with localisation.
3The Coordinate System We Use
What sources of information are available to the
auditory system? Cues for azimuth Cues for
distance Cues for elevation
4Localisation
- Cues for localisation in the horizontal plane
- Interaural time differences (ITD) for low
frequencies - Interaural level differences (ILD)
for high frequencies
5Reverberation
- In reverberant environments, the listener
receives cues from different directions. The
sound that arrives to the ear is the combined
effect of multiple sound reflections within a
room - The precedence effect, is our ability to localise
the sound source in a reverberant environment
using the first wave that arrives to the ear
(Yost, 2000) - Reverberation can be simulated using different
softwares. Different environments can be
resembled by changing the reverberation
parameters.
6The Effect of Reverberation on Sound
Localisation(1)
- As distance between the sound source and
the listener increases, the amount of direct
sound energy arriving at the listeners ears
decreases and the amount of reverberant
(reflected) energy increases (Mershon et al,1989) -
-
7(2)
- A study by Cunningham (2000) showed that
listeners adapt to the reverberation in a room
(broadband noise stimulus). - Results show that reverberation degrades
perception of source direction, but with
experience in a given room, performance improves - Reverberation enhances distance perception but
distance accuracy still improves with experience - Giguere and Abel (1993) found that localisation
of a third octave noise is worse in the
reverberant conditions.
8My Research Questions?
- 1- Is there any effect of reverberation on sound
localisation on normal hearing and hearing
impaired listeners? - 2-What is the effect of amplification on sound
localisation in the reverberant environments?
9The Test Setup
- 21 speakers in anechoic chamber
- Measure average error in degrees (accuracy of
localisation)
10Stimuli
- For first two experiments, a speech sentence was
used (where do I speak from?) using a recorded
male voice. - The stimulus was modified in each experiment in a
different way. - Each sound will be replicated twice from the 21
loudspeakers in a randomized manner--gtone run - 2 runs per stimulus
- Reverberation was created using Adobe audition.
The reverberation components were added to the
sound files on the right (stereo) channel
11Subjects
- Otologically normal (according to BSA 2004). Must
have symmetrical hearing(lt10dB) - Age between 18-30 yrs, and have a normal state of
health - Right handed ( to avoid difference in performance
according to handedness)
12Data Collection
- Subjects need to touch a point on the sensitive
computer screen that corresponds to the speaker
position
131st Experiment
- Is there any effect of reverberation on sound
localisation on normal listeners? - To answer the above question, 14 subjects were
recruited .Three types of stimuli were used - 1) Speech stimulus
? (SPEECH) - 2) High pass speech (cut off frequency at 1600
Hz) ? (HPS) - 3) Low pass speech
? (LPS) - In addition,
- 4) Speech stimulus with reverberation. ?
(SPEECH-R) - 5) High pass speech with reverberation ? (HPS-R)
- 6) Low pass speech with reverberation. ? (LPS-R)
141st Experiment
151st Experiment
16Results
- Significant effect of reverberation was found on
localising the lateral speaker positions only.
172nd Experiment
- What effect does the reverberation length
have on the ability to localise sound? - In this experiment each 8 subjects underwent 5
conditions in the same anechoic chamber. Some
reverberation was added to resemble 5 different
environments. - 1-resembling the rev of large auditorium ?
(Rev 1) - 2-resembling the rev of a medium concert hall ?
(Rev 2) - 3-resembling the rev of small club ?
(Rev 3) - 4-resembling the rev of furnished living room ?
(Rev 4) - 5-no reverberation was added ?
(No Rev) -
182nd Experiment
19Reverberant Room Experiment
- Performing the same localisation experiment in
the real reverberant room in Rayleigh building. - Stimuli used are
- Speech
- low-pass speech
- High pass speech
- 4 KHz pure tone
- 500 Hz pure tone
20Reverberant Room Results
21Comparing Simulated Reverberation and Real
Reverberation
22Speech Signals (Anechoic vs. Reverberant)
23Pure tones(Anechoic vs. Reverberant)
24Conclusions for the normal hearing listeners
- No Significant difference was found between the
real Reverberant room and the simulated
reverberation. - Reverberation doesnt seem to have an effect on
the ability to localise the speech stimulus even
for longer reverberation times. However, The
ability to localise pure tones were degraded by
reverberation.
25Hearing Impaired listeners Experiment
- Performing the same experiment on hearing
impaired subjects. To investigate the effect of
hearing aids on utilizing ILD and ITD cues in the
reverberant conditions. Moreover, compare there
performance with and without hearing aids. - This will give us insight into the beneficial and
the detrimental effects of adding reverberation
in an auditory display .
26Hearing Impaired Listeners
- Some hearing impaired listeners reported that
aided localisation is better when compared to
unaided. On the other hand, experimental results
revealed that aided localisation is worse than
unaided in the anechoic conditions. This indicats
that audibility is important in localisation but
again there are some disadvantages of hearing
aids when it comes to localisation. There are a
number of potential explanations for this
finding.
27Methodology
- Twenty eight adults with high frequency slopping
hearing loss were recruited from the Audiology
department in the Royal South Hants Hospital in
Southampton. - Aged between 50 and 80 years.
- No signs of Tinnitus, Conductive hearing loss.
- Symmetrical Hearing loss (no more than 15 dB
threshold differences across all - Patients use bilateral Siemens Prisma pro
hearing aids for 6 months at least. - Signals used are high pass pink noise, low pass
pink noise, pink noise and speech.
28Effect of Amplification
29Effect of Reverberation
30Hearing aid wearers and localisation (Results)
- Hearing aid wearers were more accurate in their
performances without their hearing aids as
opposed to with their hearing aids. However, this
difference was the greatest when it come to
localising the high pass pink noise . - Significant effect of reverberation on localising
pink noise , speech and low pass pink noise.
Greater effect was found for the low pass pink
noise in both aided and unaided conditions. - There is a significant decrease in the
performance of the hearing aid wearers in both
conditions (Aided and Unaided) when compared to
normal hearing listeners.
31Future plan
- The effect of reverberation on ITDs and ILDs was
measured using KEMAR (Knowles Electronics Manikin
for Acoustic Research). - Put the data together and write up
32Thank you Q A
33References
- Cunningham, B. (2000, April). Proceedings of the
2000 International Conference on - Auditory Display, Atlanta, GA, Learning
Reverberation Considerations for - Spatial Auditory Displays.
- Gelfand, S.A. (1998). Hearing An introduction to
psychological and physiological - Acoustics. 3rd edition. New York Marcel Dekker.
pp. 374-381 - Giguere, C. and Abel, S. M. (1993). Sound
localization Effects of reverberation time,
speaker array, stimulus frequency, and stimulus
rise/decay. Journal of the Acoustical Society of
America, 94, pt 1, 769-776. - Lutman M, and Payne E, (2002) Investigation of
localisation abilities of bilateral users of - Phonak Claro instrument. ISVR Contract Report No.
02/18, 2002 - Mershon, D.H., W.L. Ballenger, A.D. Little, P.L.
McMurtry, and J.L. Buchanan, (1989). - Effects of room reflectance and background noise
on perceived auditory distance. - Perception, 18, 403-416.
- Yost, W. A. (2000). Fundamentals of hearing, an
introduction. 4th edition.
34Reverberant vs. Anechoic room
35Effect of amplification and reverberation on
different stimuli (1)
36(2)