A Digital Hearing Aid ASIC With Efficient 18-Band ANSI S1.11 Filter Bank and Dynamic Range Compression Algorithms
Date
2021
Authors
P, Deepu S.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
According to World Health Organization, 466 million people (more than 5 percent
of the world population) have disabling hearing loss. A Digital hearing
aid consists of analog front end and digital signal processing blocks along with
transducers. The incoming sound signal captured by the microphone is given
to an analog to digital converter (ADC). The digital output from the ADC is
processed by the digital signal processor (DSP) and the processed signal is converted
back to analog using a digital to analog converter (DAC) before sending
it to the receiver. In this work, the design of a signal processing ASIC, which
can perform the task of auditory compensation and the signal compression in a
digital hearing aid is presented.
Studies on the features of current state of the art techniques suggest a requirement
for further optimisation in the area of filter bank and dynamic range
compression algorithms. In this work, a new filter bank architecture and new
expressions addressing the e ects of gain compression stage on the attack and
release time decay coe cients of dynamic range compression algorithm are
proposed. In dynamic range compression, by using the proposed equations for
estimating the decay coe cients at the algorithm level, the errors that occur
at the output with conventional method are totally removed to meet the ANSI
S3.22 specifications for hearing aids. At architectural level, eight di erent architectures
for the DRC algorithm were compared and conclusions are drawn
on the selection of the features of DRC based on the hearing aid requirement.
Based on the results, we propose to use an absolute level detector based DRC
without smoothing stage for a low power hearing aid application. Interpolated
Finite Impulse Response (IFIR) technique was used to develop the proposed
18-band ANSI S1.11 filter bank architecture. Since IFIR technique was used,
the hardware implementation of the entire structure became less complex compared
to other architectures. The proposed algorithm requires 50% lesser number
of filter coe cients compared to other ANSI S1.11 architectures. The proposed
algorithm was implemented using standard cell based design flow and
the design was tested with NAL-NL2 gain prescription formula for 8 di erent
audiograms corresponding to di erent hearing losses. The test results show
that the maximum matching error is less than 1 dB. The major contribution of
this thesis is the complete hardware implementation of 18-band ANSI S1.11
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filter bank, as it is not reported in literature to best of our knowledge. The proposed
filter bank combined with DRC consumes a total power of 0.39 mW for
65 nm technology. The design was verified in real-time using two FPGAs, one
of them modeled as the proposed hearing aid DSP and the other as an external
audio CODEC. The hearing aid chip was provided with an SPI protocol for interfacing
with the external audio CODEC. The design was also ported to SCL
180 nm technology to fabricate a prototype ASIC.
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Keywords
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering