Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness

Because cartilage conduction—the transmission of sound via the aural cartilage—has different auditory pathways from well-known air and bone conduction, how the output volume in the external auditory canal is stimulated remains unknown. To develop a simulator approximating the conduction of sound in...

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Main Authors: Ryota Shimokura, Tadashi Nishimura, Hiroshi Hosoi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Audiology Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2039-4349/11/3/30
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spelling doaj-08e3403558264aceae0c7850fa8776832021-09-25T23:44:26ZengMDPI AGAudiology Research2039-43492021-07-01113032733410.3390/audiolres11030030Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in HardnessRyota Shimokura0Tadashi Nishimura1Hiroshi Hosoi2Department of Systems Science, Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, Osaka 560-8531, JapanDepartment of Otolaryngology—Head & Neck Surgery, Nara Medical University, Nara 634-8521, JapanMedicine-Based Town Institute, Nara Medical University, Nara 634-8521, JapanBecause cartilage conduction—the transmission of sound via the aural cartilage—has different auditory pathways from well-known air and bone conduction, how the output volume in the external auditory canal is stimulated remains unknown. To develop a simulator approximating the conduction of sound in ear cartilage, the vibrations of the pinna and sound in the external auditory canal were measured using pinna simulators made of silicon rubbers of different hardness (A40, A20, A10, A5, A0) as measured by a durometer. The same procedure, as well as a current calibration method for air conduction devices, was applied to an existing pinna simulator, the Head and Torso Simulator (hardness A5). The levels for vibration acceleration and sound pressure from these pinna simulators show spectral peaks at dominant frequencies (below 1.5 kHz) for the conduction of sound in cartilage. These peaks were likely to move to lower frequencies as hardness decreases. On approaching the hardness of actual aural cartilage (A10 to A20), the simulated levels for vibration acceleration and sound pressure approximated the measurements of human ears. The adjustment of the hardness used in pinna simulators is an important factor in simulating accurately the conduction of sound in cartilage.https://www.mdpi.com/2039-4349/11/3/30cartilage conductionpinna simulatorhead-and-torso simulatorhearing aidvibration acceleration levelsound pressure level
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryota Shimokura
Tadashi Nishimura
Hiroshi Hosoi
spellingShingle Ryota Shimokura
Tadashi Nishimura
Hiroshi Hosoi
Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
Audiology Research
cartilage conduction
pinna simulator
head-and-torso simulator
hearing aid
vibration acceleration level
sound pressure level
author_facet Ryota Shimokura
Tadashi Nishimura
Hiroshi Hosoi
author_sort Ryota Shimokura
title Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
title_short Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
title_full Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
title_fullStr Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
title_full_unstemmed Vibrational and Acoustical Characteristics of Ear Pinna Simulators That Differ in Hardness
title_sort vibrational and acoustical characteristics of ear pinna simulators that differ in hardness
publisher MDPI AG
series Audiology Research
issn 2039-4349
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Because cartilage conduction—the transmission of sound via the aural cartilage—has different auditory pathways from well-known air and bone conduction, how the output volume in the external auditory canal is stimulated remains unknown. To develop a simulator approximating the conduction of sound in ear cartilage, the vibrations of the pinna and sound in the external auditory canal were measured using pinna simulators made of silicon rubbers of different hardness (A40, A20, A10, A5, A0) as measured by a durometer. The same procedure, as well as a current calibration method for air conduction devices, was applied to an existing pinna simulator, the Head and Torso Simulator (hardness A5). The levels for vibration acceleration and sound pressure from these pinna simulators show spectral peaks at dominant frequencies (below 1.5 kHz) for the conduction of sound in cartilage. These peaks were likely to move to lower frequencies as hardness decreases. On approaching the hardness of actual aural cartilage (A10 to A20), the simulated levels for vibration acceleration and sound pressure approximated the measurements of human ears. The adjustment of the hardness used in pinna simulators is an important factor in simulating accurately the conduction of sound in cartilage.
topic cartilage conduction
pinna simulator
head-and-torso simulator
hearing aid
vibration acceleration level
sound pressure level
url https://www.mdpi.com/2039-4349/11/3/30
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