57 Final Copy For Posters and Demos
57 Final Copy For Posters and Demos
Carlos M. G. S. Lima
Raimundo C. S. Freire
Department of Industrial
Electronics at the University
of Minho - UMinho
+ 351 929256584
ABSTRACT
People who are deaf or hard of hearing require correction of the
fundamental frequency that usually is achieved by help of a
phonodiologist. The work of the phonodiologist can be however
strongly reduced by using appropriate devices that can help the
patient to train the voice positioning. This paper reports the
development of such a system based on FPGAs technology that
providing tactile and visual feedback. Contrary to the feedback
from the phonodiologist that is usually relative, the feedback
provided by a device can be provided in absolute terms. This
feature can improve the learning process that however needs the
initial learning provided by the phonodiologist.
General Terms
Reliability, Experimentation, Human Factors and Verification.
Keywords
Deafness, speech, Assistive technology, tactile stimulation and
visual stimulation.
1. INTRODUCTION
Tact is being explored as a substitute the other senses, such as
sight and hearing a long time. However, due to the development
of electronic circuits and psychophysical studies only in the early
twentieth century that there was a greater increase in research in
this area [1]. The application of tactile stimuli as a means of
transmitting acoustic information for people with hearing
impairments was investigated by [2] that surveyed the use of
vibration as a means of information transfer. From then, it has
seen many haptic devices that assist the hearing impaired [3] [4].
Deafness causes changes in vocal quality, the level of awareness
of the listeners [5]. Such a disorder in speech is noticeable when
the corresponding acoustic signal is observed. Therefore, they can
be monitored and treated by techniques based on acoustic analysis
of voice signal. In that review of signs of voices hearing impaired,
various methods have been studied and employees. Due to the fact
that the fundamental frequency levels in the hearing impaired are
generally changed, this is the first point of challenge when it is
spoken in improving the voice quality of these individuals, since
the auditory monitoring of these is modified. Thus, some
techniques are based on measures of the fundamental frequency
2. METHODOLOGY
The development was done using the Quartus II Web Edition 13.0
consisting of a programming environment, which can be used in
all phases of the design FPGA's, since it performs the steps
synthesis, placement, and routing logic design to be synthesized.
Incremental compilation, which is a configuration of the process
of transforming the source program into an object program that
serves to preserve the results of blocks that have not changed
during the project was used. This tool allows the description of
the code validation synthesis netlist generating (converted cells
are to be set), mapping and routing as well as generating the
bitstream, which constitutes the processing step of the conceptual
model of a digital circuit ready for is released into the FPGA. The
project was set in the Development Kit kit Mercurio IV, the
ALTERA manufacturer, this one comprises a EP4CE30F23C7
Cyclone IV FPGA Family And this has 30,000 logic elements and
an input clock of 50 MHz.
3. RESULTS
After two months of testing, the sentences pronounced by the
patients were recorded. Because it is a subjective assessment of
voice quality improvement of the results were compared with the
same sentences recorded before any use of visual and tactile
feedback system.
Twenty volunteers have rated the sentences pronounced before
and after the test and made a quantitative assessment of improved
voice quality, according to the rating scale of Table 1.
Table 1. Quality Improvement of Quantitative Evaluation
Vocal
Comparison of the pronunciation before and
after test sections
Rating scale
No Change
Little change
Good Change
Much Change
56%
30%
22%
11%
11%
0%
No Change
Li le Change
6. REFERENCES
[1] Geldard, F. A., Some neglected possibilities
communication. Science, 131:15831588, 1960.
of
40%
10%
60%
20%
5. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
50%
Good Change
Much Change
4. CONCLUSIONS
From the results, the following conclusions can be drawn: (1) In
the majority of cases there was a change in the perception of voice
quality; (2) In the case where there was no perceptible change the
individual had profound pre-lingual deafness. This specific case
needs more investigation to be concluded about the possibility of
improvement with the use of the frequency correction system; (3)
The tactile feedback together with the visual feedback provides
the user more quickly reaches the target frequency; (4) The