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Communication in a noisy environment: Perception of one's own voice and speech enhancement

Posted on:2011-04-28Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Ecole de Technologie Superieure (Canada)Candidate:Le Cocq, CecileFull Text:PDF
GTID:2468390011972681Subject:Health Sciences
Abstract/Summary:
Workers in noisy industrial environments are often confronted to communication problems. Lost of workers complain about not being able to communicate easily with their coworkers when they wear hearing protectors. In consequence, they tend to remove their protectors, which expose them to the risk of hearing loss. In fact this communication problem is a double one: first the hearing protectors modify one's own voice perception; second they interfere with understanding speech from others. This double problem is examined in this thesis.;The speech intelligibility from others is altered by both the high sound levels of noisy industrial environments and the speech signal attenuation due to hearing protectors. A possible solution to this problem is to denoise the speech signal and transmit it under the hearing protector. Lots of denoising techniques are available and are often used for denoising speech in telecommunication. In the framework of this thesis, denoising by wavelet thresholding is considered. A first study on "classical" wavelet denoising technics is conducted in order to evaluate their performance in noisy industrial environments. The tested speech signals are altered by industrial noises according to a wide range of signal to noise ratios. The speech denoised signals are evaluated with four criteria. A large database is obtained and analyzed with a selection algorithm which has been designed for this purpose. This first study has lead to the identification of the influence from the different parameters of the wavelet denoising method on its quality and has identified the "classical" method which has given the best performances in terms of denoising quality. This first study has also generated ideas for designing a new thresholding rule suitable for speech wavelet denoising in an industrial noisy environment. In a second study, this new thresholding rule is presented and evaluated. Its performances are better than the "classical" method found in the first study when the signal to noise ratio from the speech signal is between --10 dB and 15 dB.;When wearing hearing protectors, the modification of one's own voice perception is partly due to the occlusion effect which is produced when an earplug is inserted in the car canal. This occlusion effect has two main consequences: first the physiological noises in low frequencies are better perceived, second the perception of one's own voice is modified. In order to have a better understanding of this phenomenon, the literature results are analyzed systematically, and a new method to quantify the occlusion effect is developed. Instead of stimulating the skull with a bone vibrator or asking the subject to speak as is usually done in the literature, it has been decided to excite the buccal cavity with an acoustic wave. The experiment has been designed in such a way that the acoustic wave which excites the buccal cavity does not excite the external car or the rest of the body directly. The measurement of the hearing threshold in open and occluded car has been used to quantify the subjective occlusion effect for an acoustic wave in the buccal cavity. These experimental results as well as those reported in the literature have lead to a better understanding of the occlusion effect and an evaluation of the role of each internal path from the acoustic source to the internal car.
Keywords/Search Tags:One's own voice, Speech, Noisy, Occlusion effect, Communication, Perception, Hearing protectors, First study
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