SOUND DISTURBANCE INHIBITION SYSTEM
20200035213 ยท 2020-01-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
G10K2210/12
PHYSICS
G10K11/17861
PHYSICS
G10K11/17873
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A partial enclosure for inhibiting sound passing into and out of the partial enclosure includes an absorber-barrier or an absorber-barrier-absorber, each made from sound absorbing material and sound barrier material and arranged to form the partial enclosure. The enclosure also includes an adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system. The absorber-barrier or absorbed-barrier-absorber is positioned to block or inhibit unwanted sound from various positions of a source of the unwanted sound, or motion of the source of the unwanted sound. The adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system includes a sound generating device arranged on or in the partial enclosure to emit anti-noise signal to cancel or inhibit the unwanted sound.
Claims
1. A sound disturbance inhibition system, comprising: an acoustic partial enclosure or acoustic barrier constructed with an acoustic material formed with at least one sound absorbing layer combined, layered or integral with at least one sound barrier layer; wherein the acoustic partial enclosure or acoustic barrier is positioned to inhibit sound emanating from a range of various sound source positions, or where the sound source position changes or is moving.
2. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the sound absorbing layer comprises LUMITEX sound absorbing material and wherein the sound barrier layer comprises a OB-12 or OB-111 sound barrier.
3. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic partial enclosure or acoustic barrier may embody any of a panel, a pillow, a curtain, a canopy, a roller shade and an acoustic divider.
4. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic material is a QB-111-formed multi-layer, quilted barrier incorporating a mass loaded vinyl barrier septum with absorptive fiberglass absorbers/decouplers on each side.
5. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic material is a two-layer, GB-12-formed as mass loaded vinyl barrier with quilted absorptive fiberglass on one side.
6. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic barrier is arranged substantially vertically.
7. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic partial enclosure or acoustic barrier at least partially covers the unwanted sound source.
8. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic partial enclosure or acoustic barrier is formed as a canopy, a roller shade or a curtain made of at least one or more layers of LUMITEX sound absorbing material.
9. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic partial enclosure is formed as an acoustic roller shade and wherein the acoustic roller shade is made of at least one or more layers of LUMITEX sound absorbing material to absorb unwanted sound and exhibit sufficient transmission loss to reduce the magnitude of the unwanted sound a specified amount.
10. The sound disturbance inhibition system of claim 1, wherein the acoustic partial enclosure is formed as a pillow or pillow insert made of at least one or more LUMITEX sound absorbing material, QB111, or similar absorber/barrier or absorber/barrier/absorber material.
11. A partial enclosure for inhibiting sound passing into and out of the partial enclosure, comprising: an absorber-barrier or absorber-barrier-absorber, each made from sound absorbing material and sound barrier material, arranged to form the partial enclosure; and an adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system; wherein the absorber-barrier or absorbed-barrier-absorber is positioned to block or inhibit unwanted sound from various positions of a source of the unwanted sound, or from a moving source of unwanted sound; and wherein the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system includes at least one sound generating device arranged on or in the partial enclosure to serve as a cancelling sound source from which an anti-noise signal generated by the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system is output to effect the active noise cancellation and cancel or mask the unwanted sound.
12. The partial enclosure of claim 11, wherein the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system embodies a smartphone that is positioned within or near the partial enclosure.
13. The partial enclosure of claim 11, wherein the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system includes a sound pick-up device within or near the partial enclosure.
14. The partial enclosure of claim 11, wherein the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system includes or communicates to or with a database of sample sound signals, which are utilized to accelerate the learning of sounds to be generated to effect noise cancellation or inhibition.
15. The partial enclosure of claim 14, wherein the database is part of a controller of the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system or is part of an iPad, a smart TV, a computer chip, a virtual assistant, a smartphone or a cloud application, each in communication with the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system.
16. The partial enclosure of claim 11, wherein the database is refined over time to recognize the user and to start with and be populated with matched anti-noise signals that are user specific.
17. The partial enclosure of claim 16, wherein the database is refined over time by use, to recognize the user and accumulate data a change of unwanted sounds generated by the user, that are cancelled or masked by the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system and used as indicators of a state of health of the user.
18. The partial enclosure of claim 17, wherein the adaptive frequency matched sound masking system includes a display device and a data input device, either as part of said system, or in electronic communication to the system, enabling users to input user health-related data, including a weight gain or loss, for use as metric by the system to a determine change of state of health of the user over time.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] The invention will be described in conjunction with the following drawings in which like reference numerals designate like elements and wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0038] The following is a detailed description of example embodiments of the invention depicted in the accompanying drawings. The example embodiments are presented in such detail as to clearly communicate the invention and are designed to make such embodiments obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art. However, the amount of detail offered is not intended to limit the anticipated variations of embodiments; on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present invention, as defined by the appended claims.
[0039] In an embodiment, the inventive partial or quasi enclosure (partial enclosure and quasi enclosure are used interchangeably herein) is formed with a sheet acoustic material comprising a sound barrier layer 12 and a sound absorptive or absorbing layer 14, attached to or integral or blended with the sound barrier layer, such as shown in cross section in
[0040] The sheet material used in the inventive partial enclosure may comprise multiple sound absorbing layers 14, and/or multiple sound barrier layers 12, in any layer arrangement, with or without a base layer 16. For example, if there are 5 layers in total, in addition to the base layer, there can be 5-factorial or more possible layer arrangements, without deviating from the scope or spirit of the invention.
[0041] Please note that the barrier layer may exhibit sound barrier properties, for example, the base layer(s) 16 may limit sound passage, reflecting some sound, where the sound barrier layer(s) 12 prevent alt sound from passing therethrough. Preferably, the base layer defines an aesthetic character of the partial enclosure, in the case where it is arranged as the outer layer and, depending on the application, any layer arrangement is possible, even a base layer with a single sound absorbing layer, or with a single sound barrier layer. For that matter, the sound absorbing material may be any type of material that absorbs or inhibits sound energy when sound waves pass by or through the material, as opposed to reflecting or channeling the sound energy, as is the case of a sound barrier. For example, LUMITEX sound absorbing material, manufactured by or for, distributed and/or sold by SoundSense LLC. Wainscott, N.Y. operates as an effective sound absorbing material. LUMITEX is a lightweight, breathable, non-woven fabric that provides excellent acoustic absorption while requiring a fraction of the space required for traditional absorptive panels. And multiple layers of sound absorbing material, or one thicker layer, such as LUMITEX may be used to form a laminate that operates as an excellent sound barrier/absorber.
[0042] A barrier on the other hand is governed by its ability to attenuate sound and has an STC rating, but typically not NRC. A barrier, such as a mass loaded vinyl (MLV), stops (depending on the density per square feet of the material) anywhere from 23 dB to 35 dB. The common MLV has a weight of one pound per square foot and an STC of 26. SoundSense LLC makes various sound barrier materials available. QB-111. for example, is a barrier/absorber formed as a multi-layer, quilted sound barrier that incorporates a mass loaded vinyl barrier septum with absorptive fiberglass decouplers on both sides. Likewise, QB-12 is a two-layer, mass loaded vinyl barrier with quilted absorptive fiberglass on one side.
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[0049] Preferably, the system 60 is utilized with a partial enclosure or barrier constructed with the sound absorptive/sound barrier material, as described. Most preferably, the system 60 is implemented in a smart phone uploaded with a set of computer readable instructions that when processed by a controller in the smartphone implement the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking method. In addition to the computer readable instructions for implementing the inventive process, however, several instructions also are included for controlling the smartphone to go directly to voicemail, without ringing, when the smartphone is in its operational state as the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system. For that matter, operation of the frequency matched sound masking and/or active noise cancellation system, in reliance upon the large data set of pre-recorded sounds of concern, also may be activated by either a facial recognition system that notes the mouth opening for a snore, an error function increase or detection from the active noise cancelling system (the system implements an error correcting loop with negative feedback to generate the corrected frequency for the anti-noise signal), or similar event detector that reduces the learning time of the frequency matched sound masking or active noise cancelling system. As such, the system overcomes the problems that occur for machine learning of an event and specifically a transient event and the motion of the source to be cancelled and/or masked, such as a head turning or mouth position moving.
[0050] So, while the inventive enclosure alone can overcome the problems associated with unwanted sound, and/or a source position and motion of the source such as from a snoring person (e.g., sleeping snoring person rolling over), an animal moving, a moving vehicle emitting a sound such as from its engine or from a sound source such as a siren arranged on the vehicle, etc., implementation of the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system to complement the physical enclosure optimizes the noise inhibition. And the use of the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system with the partial enclosure, as an inventive A sound disturbance inhibition system provides for at least two options which increase the efficacy of the partial enclosure.
[0051] The first option is positioning the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system not necessarily close to the noise source, but closer to the potentially disturbed person (such as the snorer's partner) If the unwanted sound source is a snoring person, the sound masking implemented by the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system is specifically directed to the frequencies of the snore. Likewise, if the disturbing sound is a person talking in their sleep, then the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system generates sounds having frequencies that are similar or related to the frequencies generated by the person talking, but out of phase to effect cancellation. This sound masking can begin over a frequency range that is chosen from the database and then over a frequency range that the system learns. In the preferred embodiment, the database is one that is known to match the snorer, talker, animal sounds, etc.
[0052] Another option that overcomes the problems of source position, source movement or noise disturbance while the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system learns the error function for the noise cancellation or masking, is that it includes an adaptive autoregressive (AR) function, or auto regressive moving average (ARMA) function. Please note that in any implementation, most if not all of the microphones and speakers are arranged in the inventive partial enclosure. The optional active noise cancellation system works not only with a memory-stored set of sound signals (e.g., snore or other disturbing unwanted noise signals), but also is capable of learning and refining the signal based on changing noise signature (frequencies and/or amplitude) or position of the source. As an example, the unwanted sound (e.g., snore) signal may start out as a simple sine wave of frequency 250 Hertz When the person goes to bed they say, going to bed. There is a short time when there is no snoring, but just the background noise. Then, as soon as the system detects a change in the background (an event that is the snore), it immediately generates the reverse phase 250 Hertz (i.e., the anti-noise or masking signal), and outputs it to the speaker to generate the physical cancelling sound signal. The actual signal representative of the selected sound is then compared to the database 250 Hertz signal and changed, if necessary, for the next signal. This trigger to begin the active noise cancelling system can be an active user fed command, input through a Graphical user interface (GUI) or downloaded via the controller 62 or a remote computer in electrical communication with the remote computer, an active face recognition system that knows when the head is on a pillow and the mouth opens (such as captured by an image pick-up device or camera that is part of the adaptive frequency matched sound-masking system as implemented), a passive system that listens for the first snore, etc., without limitation.
[0053] Both the adaptive frequency matched sound masking and/or the active noise cancelling systems obtain the initial sound or sounds in the large database based on preliminary identifiers, such as facial recognition, speech signatures, breathing or trigger sounds, etc. This unique trigger can take into account the position of the head, as well as the degree to which the mouth is open or the movement of the chest. The full system can be an app on a phone with certain portions in a cloud, part of an audio assistant, an iPad or any other data processing system, including a computer, and any combination thereof.
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[0057] As will be evident to persons skilled in the art, the foregoing detailed description, applications and figures are presented as examples of the invention, and that variations are contemplated that do not depart from the fair scope of the teachings and descriptions set forth in this disclosure.