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The Technology of Hearing aids: Analog vs. Digital |
Hearing Aid Technology Implementation
Hearing aids are are built from analog or
digital circuits. Each technology processes sound differently. Until
recently, all hearing aids were analog. Digital hearing aids are the
newest kind of hearing aid and are superior to analog.
Analog vs. Digital
All hearing aids, whether analog or digital,
are designed to increase the loudness of sounds reaching the ear drum so
that the hearing-impaired person can better understand speech. To
accomplish this, hearing aids require three basic components:
1.
A microphone to gather acoustic energy (sound waves in the air) and
convert it to electrical energy.
2. An amplifier to increase the strength of the electrical energy.
3. A receiver, which is like a miniature speaker, that converts the
electrical energy back into acoustic energy (sound waves).
What
makes digital hearing aids different from analog hearing aids is what
happens in between.
Hearing Aid Technology Types
Each technology processes sound differently.
Until recently, all hearing aids were analog. Digital hearing aids are
the newest kind of hearing aid and are superior to analog.
Analog
Hearing Aids

Photo courtesy Unitron Hearing
Analog hearing aids use a continuously varying electrical signal to
produce sound, just like a microphone and loudspeaker. Analog hearing
aids have a microphone that picks up sound and converts the sound into
small electrical signals. These signals vary according to the pattern of
the sound. The signals are then amplified (made louder) by transistors
and fed to the ear phone on the hearing aid which is next to your ear
drum so you can hear them. Most of the better analog hearing aids
compress the sound using 'automatic gain control" (AGC). This amplifies
quiet sounds until they are loud enough to be heard, but gives less
amplification to sounds that are already loud, so you're protected
against uncomfortably loud sound levels. Analog hearing aids don’t have
all the features that come with advanced digital aids, but they are the
least expensive hearing aids available.
Digital
Hearing Aids

Photo courtesy Unitron Hearing
Digital hearing aids work in a different way than analog.
Digital hearing aids
take the signal from the microphone and convert it into "bits" of data -
("0s" and "1s") - numbers that can be manipulated by a tiny computer in
the hearing aid. This makes it possible to tailor and process sounds
very precisely, in ways that are impossible with analog aids. The bits
representing the sound are analyzed and manipulated by algorithms (a set
of instructions) to perform precise, complex actions, and are then
converted back into electricity, which is finally changed back into
sound that goes into the ear. This process happens very rapidly: there
are several million calculations occurring in the hearing aid per
second. The numbers can be manipulated in almost any way imaginable, and
this is what gives the digital hearing aid its big advantage. The binary
numbers can perform numerous complex calculations that create very
precise, very flexible hearing aids.
Cutting out background noise
When someone talks to you, you usually want to hear what they are
saying, rather than whatever noise is going on in the background. People
who use traditional analog hearing aids often complain that they find it
difficult or impossible to follow conversations in noisy places.
Many digital hearing aids are designed to reduce steady kinds of background
noise, such as the rumble of traffic or the whirr of a fan. This makes
listening more comfortable. But it does not necessarily help you to pick
out a single voice from everything else that's going on, especially when
several people are talking.