Abstract
To overcome the loudness of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner in operation, which can be 100 dB or more, the patient undergoing a scan is typically given an emergency buzzer to use in case of distress. Instead, we propose using a piezoelectric bone-conduction microphone. However, the MRI noise induces vibrations in the patient's body that degrade the speech quality. Our aim is to analyze the speech quality when using a bone-conduction microphone by estimating the effectiveness of shielding the microphone to make the patient's voice clearer against the noise. First, we calculate the level of improvement using a vibration propagation model and the approach of distributed constant on electronic circuit theory, and we design an experiment involving a human phantom made of ceramic and silicone. Next, we measure the vibration acceleration levels of a bone-conducted voice and MRI acoustic noise, and we calculate the level of improvement using the signal-to-noise ratio both with and without shielding the bone-conduction microphone. Here, the signal is the vibration acceleration level of the bone-conducted voice and the noise is the vibration acceleration level of the MRI acoustic noise. The SNR is -13 dB without shielding and -7 dB with 5600 mm2 of shielding, which corresponds to an improvement in speech quality of 6 dB. This result shows that whoever is operating the MRI could hear a patient with a relatively quiet voice against 100 dB of MRI noise.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 2017 Jan 1 |
Event | 46th International Congress and Exposition on Noise Control Engineering: Taming Noise and Moving Quiet, INTER-NOISE 2017 - Hong Kong, China Duration: 2017 Aug 27 → 2017 Aug 30 |
Other
Other | 46th International Congress and Exposition on Noise Control Engineering: Taming Noise and Moving Quiet, INTER-NOISE 2017 |
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Country/Territory | China |
City | Hong Kong |
Period | 17/8/27 → 17/8/30 |
Keywords
- Bone-conduction microphone
- MRI noise
- Speech quality
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Acoustics and Ultrasonics