Abstract: | The amplitude spectrum of an acoustic signal presented to the microphone of a hearing aid is altered drastically before it finally reaches the user's eardrum. A major part of this alteration is due to the interaction of various mechanical and acoustic resonances which are characteristic of the hearing-aid receiver and the sound transmission system linking the receiver with the eardrum. Because of the complexity of this phenomenon, there is yet no means for predicting, a priori, the true shape of the sound spectrum that will occur at the user's eardrum. This paper reports on the development and testing of just such a scheme. The accuracy of this scheme--a computer-aided mathematical technique--is measured in the laboratory on real and artificial ears. The results of those measurements show good agreement between experimental and computer-generated data below 5000 Hz. |