High Sampling Rate, Broad Spectrum, Wearable Noise Dosimeter

Loud sounds with fast rise times, like gunfire and explosions, can cause noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). Unfortunately, current models do not adequately explain how impulsive sounds cause NIHL, which makes it difficult to predict and prevent NIHL on battlefields and other hostile or rugged environments. Fortunately, the impulsive sounds experienced by soldiers and others working in rugged environments can be recorded using a compact, portable system that acquires, digitizes, and stores high-bandwidth audio data. An example of this system can be mounted on a helmet or other article and used to record hours of audio data at a bandwidth of 20 kHz or higher, which is broad enough to capture sounds with rise times less than 50 ms. An analog-to-digital converter (ADC) digitizes these broadband audio signals at rate of 40 kHz or higher to preserve the impulse information. A processor transfers the digitized samples from a buffer to a memory card for later retrieval using an interrupt-driven processing technique.

Researchers

Departments: Lincoln Laboratory
Technology Areas: Communication Systems: Wireless / Computer Science: Networking & Signals / Sensing & Imaging: Acoustics
Impact Areas: Connected World

  • methods and apparatus for recording impulsive sounds
    United States of America | Granted | 9,478,229
  • methods and apparatus for recording impulsive sounds
    United States of America | Granted | 10,074,397
  • methods and apparatus for recording impulsive sounds
    United States of America | Granted | 10,225,672

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