Acoustic Feedback
Acoustic Feedback
Acoustic Feedback
Hearing aid feedback is what happens when the acoustic signal—or sound wave—escapes the ear canal and
hits the hearing aid microphone. It can sound like a squeal, screech, whistle, loud buzz or hiss.
“It’s been around in hearing aids since the dawn of time,” Soriya Estes, owner of Texas-based
Estes Audiology said. “The more severe your hearing loss, the greater the chances for potential feedback,
simply because of the power and size of the sound wave.”
What causes audio feedback?
Room acoustics describes how sound behaves in an enclosed space. Sound of different
frequencies behaves differently in a room. Reflections between walls, floor and ceiling create room
modes at specific frequencies and locations. Reflections also produce reverberation.
Different acoustic room types
Different types of room will create such different sound fields that this in itself requires different descriptors if a
meaningful evaluation is to be made. The list of actual types of rooms can of course be made very long but, if we
restrict ourselves to the most common ones, three different basic acoustic types can be identified
Hard rooms
The first is a room with little sound absorption, a “hard room” in which the surfaces reflect most of the noise.
Rooms with absorbent ceilings
Another type of room which is much more common is a room with a sound-absorbing ceiling. This type acts
differently than the hard room and, as a rule, requires several descriptors for an acoustic assessment
Different acoustic room types:
Open-plan rooms
A third type is a room with extended forms such as open-plan areas and corridors.
How to eliminate audio feedback?
Equalization in sound recording and reproduction is the process of adjusting the volume of different
frequency bands within an audio signal. The circuit or equipment used to achieve this is called an
equalizer.
It is the process of adjusting the balance between frequency components within an electronic
signal. The most well known use of equalization is in sound recording and reproduction but there
are many other applications in electronics and telecommunications. The circuit or equipment used
to achieve equalization is called an equalizer "adjust the amplitude of audio signals at
particular frequencies" they are, "in other words, frequency-specific volume knobs." .
These devices strengthen or weaken the energy of specific frequency bands or "frequency ranges".
Equalization:
Selectively boosting or cutting bands of frequencies to improve the performance of a sound reinforcement
system.
It improve the naturalness or intelligibility of a sound reinforcement system by emphasizing the frequency
range most critical for speech.
It increases the overall output level of a sound reinforcement system by reducing the system output the
frequency bands at which the feedback occurs. These frequency bands will differ from system to system
based on many variables, including room acoustics microphone placement/design, loudspeaker location
design, even air temperature.
How to approach equalization:
Approach equalization gently and slowly! After every adjustment, listen carefully to the resulting sound. The
goal is to improve sound quality as well as increase the gain before feedback.
When the system is loud enough & or clear enough stop equalizing! Also stop equalizing & examine
complete sound reinforcement system in detail whenever the equalization causes a degradation in the sound
quality.
How does the equalization program work?
Equalizers are software or hardware filters that adjust the loudness of specific frequencies. As with all sound
engineering, the basis is on the human ear.
Certain frequencies are louder than others to our ears, despite having the same or even more energy behind it
What are the two types of Equalization
techniques?
Equalizers are used in recording studios, radio studios and production control rooms, and live sound
reinforcement and in instrument amplifiers, such as guitar amplifiers, to correct or adjust the response of
microphones, instrument pick-ups, loudspeakers, and hall acoustics.
Equalization may also be used to eliminate or reduce unwanted sounds (e.g., low-frequency hum coming
from a guitar amplifier), make certain instruments or voices more (or less) prominent, enhance particular
aspects of an instrument's tone, or combat feedback (howling) in a public address system.