Analysis of cross-talk cancellation of bilateral bone conduction stimulation

  • Jie Wang
  • , Yunda Chen
  • , Stefan Stenfelt
  • , Jinqiu Sang*
  • , Xiaodong Li
  • , Chengshi Zheng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

When presenting a stereo sound through bilateral stimulation by two bone conduction transducers (BTs), part of the sound at the left side leaks to the right side, and vice versa. The sound transmitted to the contralateral cochlea becomes cross-talk, which can affect space perception. The negative effects of the cross-talk can be mitigated by a cross-talk cancellation system (CCS). Here, a CCS is designed from individual bone conduction (BC) transfer functions using a fast deconvolution algorithm. The BC response functions (BCRFs) from the stimulation positions to the cochleae were obtained by measurements of BC evoked otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) of 10 participants. The BCRFs of the 10 participants showed that the interaural isolation was low. In 5 of the participants, a cross-talk cancellation experiment was carried out based on the individualized BCRFs. Simulations showed that the CCS gave a channel separation (CS) of more than 50 dB in the 1–3 kHz range with appropriately chosen parameter values. Moreover, a localization test showed that the BC localization accuracy improved using the CCS where a 2–4.5 kHz narrowband noise gave better localization performance than a broadband 0.4–10 kHz noise. The results indicate that using a CCS with bilateral BC stimulation can improve interaural separation and thereby improve spatial hearing by bilateral BC.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108781
JournalHearing Research
Volume434
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Bone conduction (bc)
  • Bone conduction response functions (bcrfs)
  • Bone conduction transfer functions (bctfs)
  • Channel separation (CS)
  • Cross-talk cancellation system (ccs)
  • Sound source localization

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