A model of the occlusion effect with bone-conducted stimulation
Journal article, 2007

An acoustical model using simplified ear anatomy was designed to predict the ear-canal sound pressure occlusion effect in humans. These predictions were compared perceptually as well as with ear-canal sound pressure occlusion effect measurements using a foam earplug with shallow insertion, a foam earplug with deep insertion into the bony part of the ear canal, and a circumaural earmuff. There was good resemblance between model predictions and ear-canal sound pressure measurements. It was also found that all occlusion positions, even deep ear-canal occlusion, produced noticeable occlusion effects. With the bone-conduction transducer at the forehead, the perceived occlusion effect was close to that obtained from ear-canal sound pressure data in the 0.3 to 2 kHz frequency range; when the stimulation was at the mastoid the difference between the perceived and measured ear-canal sound pressure occlusion effect was around 10 dB at frequencies below 1 kHz. Further, the occlusion effect was obtained in two clinical settings: with supra-aural earphones (TDH39), and insert earphones (CIR22). Although both transducers produced occlusion effects, insert earphones produced a greater effect than surpaaural earphones at the low frequencies.

HUMAN MIDDLE-EAR

bone conduction

occlusion effect

acoustic model

EARDRUM

HEARING

ATTENUATION

MOVEMENT

SOUND

BASIC PROPERTIES

PLACEMENT

Author

Stefan Stenfelt

Linköping University Hospital

Sabine Reinfeldt

Chalmers, Signals and Systems, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

International Journal of Audiology

1499-2027 (ISSN) 1708-8186 (eISSN)

Vol. 46 10 595-608

Subject Categories

Medical Laboratory and Measurements Technologies

DOI

10.1080/14992020701545880

More information

Created

10/7/2017