Press release in Le Figaro

Here is a press release that came out not too long ago in one of France’s leading newspapers on the ‘listen with your own ears’ project…

Figaro

Article as pdf (in French)

Article online (in French)

Translated in English…

Ears for everyone, a sound for each individual

Innovation

In partnership with the CNRS, a small French firm has developed a technology that personalises the listening experience on portable audio players.

What if the tiny earplugs of portable audio players and mobile phones were capable of reproducing an acoustic environment comparable to that of an auditorium? That is the objective of Arkamys, a small French firm of 15 employees who, in partnership with the CNRS, has studied the particularities of the human ear. Its project: to perfect a listening process that reproduces natural sensations and is adaptable to each individual.

Currently small earplugs that come with portable audio players give a stereo sound that appears rather flat compared to a Hi-Fi unit. The main reason is they do not produce the same spatial sensation. “Since the sounds arrive directly into our auditory canals, we lose our natural listening habits.” explains Arkamys’ MD, Philippe Tour. Several manufacturers, such as Creative Labs, Sensaura, Qsound or SRS Labs, have tried to resolve the problem by filtering the sound signal to add 3D effects. By simulating parameters such as distance, orientation and reverberation, this sort of treatment enables the listener to situate themselves at the centre of a dynamic auditory landscape, where the sounds come from above, to the right, behind or in front.

The only problem is that these systems are conceived for everybody, without taking into account the physical characteristics of each individual. “It’s as if we were listening with someone else’s ears,” concludes Philippe Tour. Each person has their own auditory perception, dependent upon their morphology and, in particular, the shape of one’s head and the form of one’s ears. Our technology takes these parameters into account in order to propose a more natural, more comfortable and more realistic hearing to the users of portable audio players.

Recreating spatial sensation

With the aid of the LIMSI (Laboratoire d’informatique pour la mécanique et les sciences de l’ingénieur), Arkamys’ engineers strive to measure and model the physical differences which determine the way in which each individual perceives sounds. “Everyone can identify the origin of a sound, situate objects in space and guess their distance,” observes Brian Katz, an acoustics researcher at the CNRS, who is part of the project. What’s more, this is done despite the fact that we have only two ears. “It is our brain which interprets the sound information and recreates the spatial sensation”, explains the researcher. “The small time delay between when a sound arrives in each ear enables the brain to deduce the spot where the sound comes from. The difference in levels between the sounds perceived by one ear and the other provides other spatial information.” In fact, all this information is modified by the attenuations and reflexions due to our height, the shape of our face and the ensemble of all the curves and roughness of our external ear. “All these parameters change the colour, elevation and tone of sounds,” emphasizes Brian Katz. “And they correspond to only one individual because each person has a different morphology.”

While current audio systems merely supply a standard acoustic profile that do not take all these differences into account, Arkamys’ technology will bring a personal quality of hearing to each user, corresponding to his own physical characteristics. “We can simulate several ear shapes to know which frequencies to filter in order to reconstitute with earphones the same auditory environment that you perceive naturally, for example, in a concert hall.” Philippe Tour explains that by the end of the year Arkamys will be able to create individualised acoustic profiles. “With your cellular phone, all you will need to do is take a photo of your face and send it to your server. We will calculate the audio correction coefficient best suited to your morphology. Then we will send it to you in the form of a parameters file. When you start up your audio player, you will only need to select this file in the options menu to have your personalised profile.”

Arkamys, who supplies notably to mobile phone and car manufacturers, intends on presenting its new technology to constructors of audio components, mobile audio players and mobile phones. Its management also envisages contacting telephone operators who could propose this service to their subscribers, either for free or as a paying service. But the future market of this technology could well be mobile television and games on mobile phones.”These services are going to take off this year,” Philippe Tour predicts. “At present, the visual comfort with small mobile screens is limited. By adding personalised 3D sound the user will have a larger spatial sensation that will give the impression of a larger image.”

Didie SRANZ

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