An Electroacoustic Hearing Protector Simulator That Accurately Predicts Pressure Levels in the Ear Based on Standard Performance Metrics

Abstract

Impulse-noise response pressure waveforms in the occluded volume under a hearing protector (HP) depend on energy transmission by means of its rigid motion, through its material and at skin-contact leaks. The Real Ear Attenuation at Threshold (REAT) and Microphone in Real Ears (MIRE) methods are common insertion loss measures of this process at a collection of low-level test frequencies. This paper describes a linear HP simulation with an electroacoustic (EA) simulator determined with an iterative fitting procedure using the insertion loss data. Combining this simulator with head diffraction and ear-canal models in the Auditory Hazard Analysis Algorithm for Humans (AHAAH) allows free-field pressure waveforms to be transformed to protected waveforms measured at various locations in real and artificial ears by solving the differential equations of motion. Applying the EA simulator to 384 REAT data-sets from an inter-laboratory study using ANSI S12.6 method B for inexperienced subject self-fits gives statistical frequency distributions of occluded volume, leakage elements, and predicted hazard with the four tested HPs and a rifle waveform. Further validation was obtained using manufacturer-supplied REAT data to predict and compare with protected waveforms on humans and manikins near impulse noise sources such as high-explosives, rifles, shoulder-fired recoilless rifles, and howitzers.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 01, 2013
Accession Number
ADA598427

Entities

People

  • Joel T. Kalb

Organizations

  • United States Army Research Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Attenuation
  • Computational Science
  • Differential Equations
  • Ear
  • Equations
  • Equations Of Motion
  • Free Field
  • Frequency
  • Impulse Noise
  • Insertion Loss
  • Losses
  • Materials
  • Microphones
  • Rifles
  • Simulators
  • Small Arms
  • Standards

Readers

  • Acoustics.
  • Auditory Neuroscience/Auditory Physiology.
  • Computational Modeling and Simulation