DocumentCode :
1769063
Title :
FPGA implementation of the CAR Model of the cochlea
Author :
Thakur, Chetan Singh ; Hamilton, Tara J. ; Tapson, Jonathan ; van Schaik, Andre ; Lyon, Richard F.
Author_Institution :
MARCS Inst., Univ. of Western Sydney, Kingswood, NSW, Australia
fYear :
2014
fDate :
1-5 June 2014
Firstpage :
1853
Lastpage :
1856
Abstract :
The front end of the human auditory system, the cochlea, converts sound signals from the outside world into neural impulses transmitted along the auditory pathway for further processing. The cochlea senses and separates sound in a nonlinear active fashion, exhibiting remarkable sensitivity and frequency discrimination. Although several electronic models of the cochlea have been proposed and implemented, none of these are able to reproduce all the characteristics of the cochlea, including large dynamic range, large gain and sharp tuning at low sound levels, and low gain and broad tuning at intense sound levels. Here, we implement the `Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators´ (CAR) model of the cochlea on an FPGA. CAR represents the basilar membrane filter in the `Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators with Fast-Acting Compression´ (CAR-FAC) cochlear model. CAR-FAC is a neuromorphic model of hearing based on a pole-zero filter cascade model of auditory filtering. It uses simple nonlinear extensions of conventional digital filter stages that are well suited to FPGA implementations, so that we are able to implement up to 1224 cochlear sections on Virtex-6 FPGA to process sound data in real time. The FPGA implementation of the electronic cochlea described here may be used as a front-end sound analyser for various machine-hearing applications.
Keywords :
acoustic resonator filters; acoustic signal processing; biomedical electronics; ear; field programmable gate arrays; hearing; CAR model; CAR-FAC cochlear model; Cascade of Asymmetric Resonators with Fast-Acting Compression; FPGA implementation; Virtex-6 FPGA; auditory filtering; auditory pathway; basilar membrane filter; digital filter stages; front-end sound analyser; human auditory system; machine-hearing applications; neural impulses; neuromorphic model; nonlinear active fashion; nonlinear extensions; pole-zero filter cascade model; real time; sound data processing; sound signals; Adaptation models; Auditory system; Computational modeling; Field programmable gate arrays; Filter banks; Resonator filters; Software;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems (ISCAS), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Melbourne VIC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3431-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISCAS.2014.6865519
Filename :
6865519
Link To Document :
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