HEADSET SYSTEMS AND METHODS
A wireless headset is adapted to communicate with a sound source such as a music player or a cell phone or a suitable audio or sound communicated through a one-way or two-way communication device. The headset includes a mouth wearable communicator, and a linking unit coupled to the mouth wearable communicator, the linking unit adapted to communicate with the sound source.
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This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/572,189 filed Aug. 10, 2012 (now U.S. Pat. No. 8,712,078 issued Apr. 29, 2014), which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/032,226 filed Feb. 15, 2008 (now U.S. Pat. No. 8,270,637 issued Sep. 19, 2012), the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
BACKGROUNDThe advent of music players and cell phones has driven the demand for small and portable headphones that can reproduce sound with high fidelity so that the user can listen to the sound without disturbing people who are nearby. These headphones typically use small speakers that can render the sound. With cell phones, there is a need to capture the user's voice with a microphone and relay the voice over the cellular network so that the parties can engage in a conversation even though they are separated by great distances. Microphones are transducers just like speakers. They change sound waves into electrical signals, while speakers change electrical signals into sound waves. When a headphone is equipped with a small microphone, it is called a headset.
A headset may be used in conjunction with a telephone device for several reasons. With a headset, the user is relived of the need to hold the phone and thus retains his or her hands free to perform other functions. Headsets also function to position the earphone and microphone portions of a telephone close to the user's head to provide for clearer reception and transmission of audio signals with less interference from background noise. Headsets may be used with telephones, computers, cellular telephones, and other devices.
The wireless industry has launched several after-market products to free the user form holding the phone while making phone calls. For example, various headsets are manufactured with an earpiece connected to a microphone and most of these headsets or hands-free kits are compatible with any phone brand or model. A possible headset can be plugged-in to the phone and comprise a microphone connected via wires to the headset so that the microphone, when in position, can appropriately capture the voice of the user. Other headsets are built in with a Bluetooth chip, or other wireless means, so that the voice conversation can be wirelessly diverted from the phone to the earpiece of the headset. The Bluetooth radio chip acts as a connector between the headset and a Bluetooth chip of the cellphone.
The ability to correctly identify voiced and unvoiced speech is critical to many speech applications including speech recognition, speaker verification, noise suppression, and many others. In a typical acoustic application, speech from a human speaker is captured and transmitted to a receiver in a different location. In the speaker's environment there may exist one or more noise sources that pollute the speech signal, or the signal of interest, with unwanted acoustic noise. This makes it difficult or impossible for the receiver, whether human or machine, to understand the user's speech.
United States Patent 20080019557 describes a headset which includes a metal or metallic housing to which various accessory components can be attached. These components can include an ear loop, a necklace for the holding of the headset while not being worn on the ear, an external mount, and other components. The components include a magnet which facilitates mounting to the headset. The components are not restricted to a particular attach point, which enhances the ability of the user to adjust the geometry for better fit.
With conventional headsets, people nearby can notice when the user is wearing the headset. U.S. Pat. No. 7,076,077 discloses a bone conduction headset which is inconspicuous in appearance during wearing. The bone conduction headset includes a band running around a back part of the user's head; a fastening portion formed in each of opposite end portions of the band, a bone conduction speaker provided with a knob which is engaged with the fastening portion; and, an ear engagement portion, which runs over the bone conduction speaker during wearing of the headset to reach and engage with the user's ear. An extension of either the fastening portion in the band or a casing of the bone conduction speaker may be formed into the ear engagement portion.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,246,058 discloses a system for detecting voiced and unvoiced speech in acoustic signals having varying levels of background noise. The systems receive acoustic signals at two microphones, and generate difference parameters between the acoustic signals received at each of the two microphones. The difference parameters are representative of the relative difference in signal gain between portions of the received acoustic signals. The systems identify information of the acoustic signals as unvoiced speech when the difference parameters exceed a first threshold, and identify information of the acoustic signals as voiced speech when the difference parameters exceed a second threshold. Further, embodiments of the systems include non-acoustic sensors that receive physiological information to aid in identifying voiced speech.
SUMMARYIn one aspect, a wireless headset adapted to communicate with a sound source includes a mouth wearable communicator; and a linking unit coupled to the mouth wearable communicator, the linking unit adapted to communicate with the sound source.
Implementations of the above aspect may include one or more of the following. The mouth wearable communicator can be a bone conduction device. The mouth wearable communicator can be a custom oral device. The mouth wearable communicator can have a microphone embedded therein. The microphone can be an intraoral microphone or an extraoral microphone. For cellular telephones and other telephones, the microphone can cancel environmental noise and transmit a user's voice to the telephone. The sound source can be a music player, a video player, a cellular telephone, or a computer. The mouth wearable communicator can include a data storage device with its content encrypted. The device can include a housing having a shape which is conformable to at least a portion of at least one tooth; an actuaable transducer disposed within or upon the housing and in vibratory communication with a surface of the at least one tooth; and a wireless communication transceiver coupled to the transducer to provide received sound to the user and to provide communication for the user. The headset can be an oral appliance having a shape which conforms to the at least one tooth. The communicator can include an electronic assembly disposed within or upon the housing and in communication with a transducer. The linking unit can be a transceiver compatible with an 802 protocol, cellular protocol, or Bluetooth protocol. In other embodiments, the device provides an electronic and transducer device that can be attached, adhered, or otherwise embedded into or upon a removable oral appliance or other oral device to form a medical tag containing patient identifiable information. Such an oral appliance may be a custom-made device fabricated from a thermal forming process utilizing a replicate model of a dental structure obtained by conventional dental impression and/or imaging methods. The electronic and transducer assembly may receive incoming sounds either directly or through a receiver to process and amplify the signals and transmit the processed sounds via a vibrating transducer element coupled to a tooth or other bone structure, such as the maxillary, mandibular, or palatine bone structure.
In another aspect, a method for communicating with a portable appliance includes intraorally wearing a mouth wearable communicator; and linking to the mouth wearable communicator to the portable appliance.
Implementations of the above aspect may include one or more of the following. The process includes transmitting sound using a bone conduction device. The mouth wearable communicator can be supplied as a custom oral device. A directional microphone can be used with the mouth wearable communicator. The microphone can be a noise cancelling microphone. The portable appliance can receive short-range transmission from the mouth wearable communicator and relay the transmission over a wide area network. The sound can be communicated through a tooth, a maxillary bone, a mandibular bone, or a palatine bone.
In another aspect, an electronic and transducer device can be attached, adhered, or otherwise embedded into or upon a removable oral appliance or other oral device to form a head-set assembly. In another embodiment, the device provides an electronic and transducer device that can be attached, adhered, or otherwise embedded into or upon a removable oral appliance or other oral device to form as head-set. Such an oral appliance may be a custom-made device fabricated from a thermal forming process utilizing a replicate model of a dental structure obtained by conventional dental impression methods. The electronic and transducer assembly may receive incoming sounds either directly or through a receiver to process and amplify the signals and transmit the processed sounds via a vibrating transducer element coupled to a tooth or other bone structure, such as the maxillary, mandibular, or palatine bone structure.
Advantages of preferred embodiments may include one or more of the following. The bone conduction headset is easy to wear and take off in use, and is further inconspicuous in appearance during the user's wearing thereof. The device can be operated without nearby people noticing the user's wearing of the headset. Comparing with headphones, the device avoids covering the ears of the listener. This is important if (a) the listener needs to have the ears unobstructed (to allow them to hear other sounds in the environment), or (b) to allow them to plug the ears (to prevent hearing damage from loud sounds in the environment). The system is a multi-purpose communication platform that is rugged, wireless and secure. The system provides quality, hands-free, yet inconspicuous communication capability for field personnel.
An exemplary wireless headset communication system is shown in
The mouth wearable communicator 1 can be a custom oral device. The sound source unit 2 or 3A or 3B contains a short-range transceiver that is protocol compatible with the linking unit. For example, the sound source can have a Bluetooth transceiver that communicates with the Bluetooth transceiver linking unit 8 in the mouth wearable communicator 1. The mouth wearable communicator 1 can receive the data transmitted over the Bluetooth protocol and drive a bone conduction transducer 9 to render or transmit sound to the user.
The mouth wearable communicator can have a microphone 6A embedded therein. The microphone 6A can be an intraoral microphone or an extraoral microphone. For cellular telephones and other telephones, a second microphone 6B can be used to cancel environmental noise and transmit a user's voice to the telephone. A noise canceller 7 receives signals from the microphones 6A-6B and cancels ambient noise to provide a clean sound capture.
The two way communication device can have a microphone 6B to pick up ambient sound. The microphone 6B can be an intraoral microphone or an extraoral microphone. In one embodiment, the microphone cancels environmental noise and transmits a user's voice to the remote station. This embodiment provides the ability to cancel environmental noises while transmitting subject's own voice to the phone 3B which in turn communicates with a remote base station 5B. As the microphone is in a fixed location (compared to ordinary wireless communication devices) and very close to user's own voice, the system can handle environmental noise reduction that is important in working in high noise areas. As such, the headset of
The mouth wearable communicator 1 can use a bone conduction transducer 9 or any suitable bone conduction device. The mouth wearable communicator 1 can be a custom oral device. The mouth wearable communicator 1 can include a data storage device with its content encrypted. The device can include a housing having a shape which is conformable to at least a portion of at least one tooth; an actuatable transducer disposed within or upon the housing and in vibratory communication with a surface of the at least one tooth; and a wireless communication transceiver coupled to the transducer to provide received sound to the user and to provide communication for the user. The headset can be an oral appliance having a shape which conforms to the at least one tooth. The communicator can include an electronic assembly disposed within or upon the housing and in communication with a transducer. The linking unit 8 can be a transceiver compatible with an 802 protocol, cellular protocol, or Bluetooth protocol. In other embodiments, the device provides an electronic and transducer device that can be attached, adhered, or otherwise embedded into or upon a removable oral appliance or other oral device to form as medical tag containing patient identifiable information. Such an oral appliance may be a custom-made device fabricated from a thermal forming process utilizing a replicate model of a dental structure obtained by conventional dental impression and/or imaging methods. The electronic and transducer assembly may receive incoming sounds either directly or through a receiver to process and amplify the signals and transmit the processed sounds via a vibrating transducer element coupled to a tooth or other bone structure, such as the maxillary, mandibular, or palatine bone structure.
The system couples microphones and voicing activity sensors to a signal processor. The processor executes a detection algorithm, and a denoising code to minimize background acoustic noise.
Two microphones 6A-6B are used with the microphone 6A being the bone conduction microphone and which is considered the “signal” microphone. The microphone 6B captures air noise or ambient noise, whose signal is filtered and subtracted from the signal in the microphone 6A.
In one embodiment, the system runs an array algorithm for speech detection that uses the difference in frequency content between two microphones to calculate a relationship between the signals of the two microphones. As known in the art and discussed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,246,058, the content of which is incorporated by reference, this embodiment can cancel noise without requiring a specific orientation of the array with respect to the signal.
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In one embodiment, the mouth wearable communicator has a housing having a shape which is conformable to at least a portion of at least one tooth, an actuatable transducer disposed within or upon the housing and in vibratory communication with a surface of the at least one tooth; and a wireless communication transceiver coupled to the transducer to provide received sound to the user and to provide communication for the user. The two way communication device can be an oral appliance having a shape which conforms to the at least one tooth. An electronic assembly can be disposed within or upon the housing and which is in communication with the transducer.
In another embodiment, the device 1 provides an electronic and transducer device 9 that can be attached, adhered, or otherwise embedded into or upon a removable oral appliance or other oral device to form a medical tag containing patient identifiable information. Such an oral appliance may be a custom-made device fabricated from a thermal forming process utilizing a replicate model of as dental structure obtained by conventional dental impression methods. The electronic and transducer assembly may receive incoming sounds either directly or through a receiver to process and amplify the signals and transmit the processed sounds via a vibrating transducer element coupled to a tooth or other bone structure, such as the maxillary, mandibular, or palatine bone structure.
In one embodiment, the microphones can be place on each side of the ears to provide noise cancellation, optimal sound localization and directionality. The microphones can be placed inside or outside the ears. For example, the microphones can be placed either at the opening or directly with the user's ear canals. Each of the systems includes a battery, a signal processor, a transmitter, all of which can be positioned in a housing that clips onto the ear which, rests behind the ear between the pinna and the skull, or alternatively can be positioned in the ear's concha. The transmitter is connected to a wire/antenna that in turn is connected to the microphone.
Each transmitter transmits information to a receiver that activates to transducer that is powered by a battery. Each side of the head can have one set of receiver, transducer and battery. This embodiment provides a bone conduction hearing aid device with dual externally located microphones that are placed at the entrance to or in the ear canals and an oral appliance containing dual transducers in communication with each other. The device will allow the user to enjoy the most natural sound input due to the location of the microphone which takes advantage of the pinna for optimal sound localization (and directionality).
In another embodiment, the microphones receive sound signals from both sides of the head, processes those signals to send a signal to the transducer on the side of the head where the sound is perceived by the microphone to be at a higher sound level. A phase-shifted signal is sent to the transducer on the opposite side of the head. These sounds will then “add” in the cochlea where the sound is louder and “cancel” on the opposite cochlea providing the user with the perception of directionality of the sound.
In yet another embodiment, the microphone at the first ear receives sound signals from the first side of the head, processes those signal to send a signal to the transducer on that same or first side of the oral appliance. A second microphone at the second ear receives a sound signal that is lower in amplitude and delayed in respect to the sound sensed by the first microphone due to head shadowing and physical separation of the microphones, and sends a corresponding signal to the second transducer on the second side of the oral appliance. The sound signals from the transducers will be perceived by each cochlea on each side of the head as being different in amplitude and phase, which will result in the perception of directionality by the user.
As best shown in
The mouth wearable communicator can provide a data storage device such as a solid state memory or a flash storage device. The content of the data storage device can be encrypted for security. The linking unit can transmit encrypted data for secure transmission if desired.
Turning now to more details on the device 1, as shown in
Generally, the volume of electronics and/or transducer assembly 16 may be minimized so as to be unobtrusive and as comfortable to the user when placed in the mouth. Although the size may be varied, a volume of assembly 16 may be less than 800 cubic millimeters. This volume is, of course, illustrative and not limiting as size and volume of assembly 16 and may be varied accordingly between different users.
Moreover, removable oral appliance 18 may be fabricated from various polymeric or a combination of polymeric, and metallic materials using any number of methods, such as computer-aided machining processes using, computer numerical control (CNC) systems or three-dimensional printing processes, e.g., stereolithography apparatus (SLA), selective laser sintering (SLS), and/or other similar processes utilizing three-dimensional geometry or the patient's dentition, which may be obtained via any number of techniques. Such techniques may include use of scanned dentition using intra-oral scanners such as laser, white light, ultrasound, mechanical three-dimensional touch scanners, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), other optical methods, etc.
In forming the removable oral appliance 18, the appliance 18 may be optionally formed such that it is molded to fit over the dentition and at least a portion of the adjacent gingival tissue to inhibit the entry of food, fluids, and other debris into the oral appliance 18 and between the transducer assembly and tooth surface. Moreover, the greater surface area of the oral appliance 18 may facilitate the placement and configuration of the assembly 16 onto the appliance 18.
Additionally, the removable oral appliance 18 may be optionally fabricated to have a shrinkage factor such that when placed onto the dentition, oral appliance 18 may be configured to securely grab onto the tooth or teeth as the appliance 18 may have a resulting size slightly smaller than the scanned tooth or teeth upon which the appliance 18 was formed. The fitting may result in a secure interference fit between the appliance 18 and underlying dentition.
In one variation, with assembly 14 positioned upon the teeth, as shown in
The transmitter assembly 22, as described in further detail below, may contain a microphone assembly as well as a transmitter assembly and may be configured in any number of shapes and forms worn by the user, such as a watch, necklace, lapel, phone, belt-mounted device, etc.
With respect to microphone 30, a variety of various microphone systems may be utilized. For instance, microphone 30 may be a digital, analog, and/or directional type microphone. Such various types of microphones may be interchangeably configured to be utilized with the assembly, if so desired.
Power supply 36 may be connected to each of the components in transmitter assembly 22 to provide power thereto. The transmitter signals 24 may be in any wireless form utilizing, e.g., radio frequency, ultrasound microwave, Blue Tooth® (BLUETOOTH SIG, INC., Bellevue, Wash.), etc. for transmission to assembly 16. Assembly 22 may also optionally include one or more input controls 28 that a user may manipulate to adjust various acoustic parameters of the electronics and/or transducer assembly 16, such as acoustic focusing, volume control, filtration, muting, frequency optimization, sound adjustments, and tone adjustments, etc.
The signals transmitted 24 by transmitter 34 may be received by electronics and/or transducer assembly 16 via receiver 38, which may be connected to an internal processor for additional processing of the received signals. The received signals may be communicated to transducer 40, which may vibrate correspondingly against a surface of the tooth to conduct the vibratory signals through the tooth and bone and subsequently to the middle ear to facilitate hearing of the user. Transducer 40 may be configured as any number of different vibratory mechanisms. For instance, in one variation, transducer 40 may be an electromagnetically actuated transducer. In other variations, transducer 40 may be in the form of a piezoelectric crystal having a range of vibratory frequencies, e.g., between 250 to 4000 Hz.
Power supply 42 may also be included with assembly 16 to provide power to the receiver, transducer, and/or processor, if also included. Although power supply 42 may be a simple battery, replaceable or permanent, other variations may include a power supply 42 which is charged by inductance via an external charger. Additionally, power supply 42 may alternatively be charged via direct coupling to an alternating current (AC) or direct current (DC) source. Other variations may include a power supply 42 which is charged via a mechanical mechanism, such as an internal pendulum or slidable electrical inductance charger as known in the art, which is actuated via, e.g., motions of the jaw and/or movement for translating the mechanical motion into stored electrical energy for charging power supply 42.
In another variation of assembly 16, rather than utilizing an extra-buccal transmitter, two-way communication assembly 50 may be configured as an independent assembly contained entirely within the user's mouth, as shown in
In order to transmit the vibrations corresponding to the received auditory signals efficiently and with minimal loss to the tooth or teeth, secure mechanical contact between the transducer and the tooth is ideally maintained to ensure efficient vibratory communication. Accordingly, any number of mechanisms may be utilized to maintain this vibratory communication.
In one variation as shown in
An electronics and/or transducer assembly 64 may be simply placed, embedded, or encapsulated within housing 62 for contacting the tooth surface. In this variation, assembly 64 may be adhered against the tooth surface via an adhesive surface or film 66 such that contact is maintained between the two. As shown in
Aside from an adhesive film 66, another alternative may utilize an expandable or wettable member to ensure a secure mechanical contact of the transducer against the tooth. As shown in
Another variation is shown in
In yet another variation, the electronics may be contained as a separate assembly 90 which is encapsulated within housing 62 and the transducer 92 may be maintained separately from assembly 90 but also within housing 62. As shown in
In other variations as shown in
In yet another variation shown in
Another variation for a mechanical mechanism is illustrated in
In yet another variation, the electronics 150 and the transducer 152 may be separated from one another such that electronics 150 remain disposed within housing 62 but transducer 152, connected via wire 154, is located beneath dental oral appliance 60 along an occlusal surface of the tooth, as shown in
In the variation of
In yet another variation, an electronics and/or transducer assembly 170 may define a channel or groove 172 along a surface for engaging a corresponding dental anchor 174, as shown in
In yet another variation,
Similarly, as shown in
In yet other variations, vibrations may be transmitted directly into the underlying bone or tissue structures rather than transmitting directly through the tooth or teeth of the user. As shown in
In yet another variation, rather utilizing a post or screw drilled into the underlying bone itself, a transducer may be attached, coupled, or otherwise adhered directly to the gingival tissue surface adjacent to the teeth. As shown in
For any of the variations described above, they may be utilized as a single device or in combination with any other variation herein, as practicable, to achieve the desired hearing level in the user. Moreover, more than one oral appliance device and electronics and/or transducer assemblies may be utilized at any one time. For example,
Moreover, each of the different transducers 270, 272, 274, 276 can also be programmed to vibrate in a manner which indicates the directionality of sound received by the microphone worn by the user. For example, different transducers positioned at different locations within the user's mouth can vibrate in a specified manner by providing sound or vibrational queues to inform the user which direction a sound was detected relative to an orientation of the user. For instance, a first transducer located, e.g., on a user's left tooth, can be programmed to vibrate for sound detected originating from the user's left side. Similarly, a second transducer located, e.g., on a user's right tooth, can be programmed to vibrate for sound detected originating from the user's right side. Other variations and queues may be utilized as these examples are intended to be illustrative of potential variations.
In variations where the one or more microphones are positioned in intra-buccal locations, the microphone may be integrated directly into the electronics and/or transducer assembly, as described above. However, in additional variation, the microphone unit may be positioned at a distance from the transducer assemblies to minimize feedback. In one example, similar to as variation shown above, microphone unit 282 may be separated from electronics and/or transducer assembly 280, as shown in
Although the variation illustrates the microphone unit 282 placed adjacent to the gingival tissue 268 unit 282 may be positioned upon another tooth or another location within the mouth. For instance,
In yet another variation for separating the microphone from the transducer assembly,
The applications of the devices and methods discussed above are not limited to the treatment of hearing loss but may include any number of further treatment applications. Moreover, such devices and methods may be applied to other treatment sites within the body. Modification of the above-described assemblies and methods for carrying out the invention, combinations between different variations as practicable, and variations of aspects of the invention that are obvious to those of skill in the art are intended to be within the scope of the claims.
Claims
1. A wireless headset, comprising:
- a. a mouth wearable communicator having a transducer which is configured to transmit vibrations into a surface of at least one tooth;
- b. a linking unit coupled to the mouth wearable communicator, the linking unit adapted to communicate with a sound source;
- c. a first microphone to pick up body conduction sound;
- d. a second microphone to pick up ambient sound; and
- e. a noise canceller to subtract ambient sound from the body conduction sound.
2. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the transducer comprises a bone conduction transducer.
3. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the mouth wearable communicator comprises a custom oral device.
4. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the first microphone or second microphone comprises one of an intraoral microphone and an extraoral microphone.
5. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the sound source comprises one of a telephone, a music player, a video player, a cellular telephone, a computer, a one-way communication device, a two-way communication device, or a wireless hands-free communication device.
6. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the mouth wearable communicator further comprises a data storage device.
7. The wireless headset of claim 1, further comprising a wireless communication transceiver in communication with the transducer.
8. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the mouth wearable communicator comprises an oral appliance having a shape which conforms to the at least one tooth.
9. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the mouth wearable communicator further comprises an electronic assembly in communication with the transducer.
10. The wireless headset of claim 1, wherein the linking unit comprises a transceiver compatible with one of an 802 protocol, cellular protocol, or Bluetooth protocol.
11. A method for communicating with a sound source, comprising:
- a. providing a wireless headset comprising a mouth wearable communicator having a transducer which is configured to transmit vibrations into a surface of at least one tooth;
- b. linking the mouth wearable communicator to the sound source, wherein the wireless headset further comprises a first microphone to pick up body conduction sound, a second microphone to pick up ambient sound, and a noise canceller to subtract ambient sound from the body conduction sound to result in a filtered sound; and
- c. transmitting the filtered sound into the surface of the at least one tooth via the transducer.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein transmitting the filtered sound comprises transmitting the filtered sound via a bone conduction device.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein providing comprises providing the mouth wearable communicator as a custom oral device.
14. The method of claim 11, further comprising receiving a short-range transmission from the mouth wearable communicator and relaying the transmission over a wide area network.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 25, 2014
Publication Date: Oct 30, 2014
Applicant: SONITUS MEDICAL, INC. (San Mateo, CA)
Inventor: Amir A. ABOLFATHI (Woodside, CA)
Application Number: 14/261,947
International Classification: H04R 1/10 (20060101);