Clinical Validation of the Ansi C63.19 Draft Standard for Measuring Compatibility between Digital Wireless Phones and Hearing Aids
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Date
2000-07-01Author
Robert E. Schlegel
Hank Grant
Tamy L. Fry
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Abstract
Acoustic interference can be generated in hearing aids by the pulsed transmission signal of a digital wireless phone. This interference, resembling a buzzing, clicking, or static sound, is annoying and can seriously degrade the intelligibility of the speech. The objective of the ANSI C63.19 Draft Standard is to provide a simple, reliable test procedure for measuring the immunity of hearing aids to this interference. To clinically validate the standard, hearing aids were custom manufactured for eighteen hearing-impaired participants. The participants rated the effects of the interference experienced when using five digital wireless phone technologies (CDMA at 800 and 1900 MHz, TDMA-50 Hz at 800 and 1900 MHz, and TDMA-217 Hz at 1900 MHz) at five transmission power levels (0, 6, 12, 18, and 24 dBm). More than two-thirds of the subjects responded as predicted by acoustic measurements of the interference. The remaining subjects experienced difficulties unrelated to wireless phone interference due to severe hearing loss or excessive feedback. These results support the use of acoustic measurements of immunity as the basis for the ANSI C63.19 standard.
Citation
Schlegel, R. E., Grant, H., & Fry, T. L. (2000). Clinical Validation of the Ansi C63.19 Draft Standard for Measuring Compatibility between Digital Wireless Phones and Hearing Aids. Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting, 44(26), 144-147. doi: 10.1177/154193120004402603