An acoustic head simulator for hearing protector evaluation. I: Design and construction |
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Authors: | H Kunov C Giguère |
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Institution: | Institute of Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto, Canada. |
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Abstract: | As an alternative to subjective methods, an acoustic head simulator was constructed for hearing protector evaluation. The primary purpose of the device is for hearing protector testing and research under high-level steady-state and impulse noise environments. The design is based on the KEMAR manikin and therefore approximates the physical dimensions and the acoustical eardrum impedance of the median human adult. The head simulator includes a mechanical reproduction of the human circumaural and intraaural tissues with a silicone rubber material. A compliant head-neck system was constructed to approximate the vibrational characteristics of the human head in a sound field in order to simulate the inertia effect of earmuffs. The bone-conducted sounds are not mechanically reproduced in the design. Applications for the device are reported in a companion article C. Giguère and H. Kunov, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 85, 1197-1205 (1989)]. |
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