Hearing impairment is a prevalent problem with daily challenges like impaired speech intelligibility and sound localisation. One of the shortcomings of spatial filtering in hearing aids is that speech intelligibility is often not optimised directly, meaning that different auditor
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Hearing impairment is a prevalent problem with daily challenges like impaired speech intelligibility and sound localisation. One of the shortcomings of spatial filtering in hearing aids is that speech intelligibility is often not optimised directly, meaning that different auditory processes contributing to intelligibility are often not considered. One example is the perceptual phenomenon known as spatial release from masking (SRM). This paper develops a signal model that explicitly considers SRM in the beamforming design, achieved by transforming the binaural intelligibility prediction model (BSIM) into a signal processing framework. The resulting extended signal model is used to analyse the performance of reference beamformers and design a novel beamformer that more closely considers how the auditory system perceives binaural sound. It can be shown that the binaural minimum variance distortionless response (BMVDR) beamformer is also an optimal solution for the extended, perceived model, suggesting that SRM does not play a significant role in intelligibility enhancement after optimal beamforming. However, the optimal beamformer is no longer unique in the extended signal model. The additional secondary degrees of freedom can be used to preserve binaural cues of interfering sources while still achieving the same perceived performance of the BMVDR beamformer, though with a possible high sensitivity to intelligibility model mismatch errors.
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