4.3 Article

Towards Child-Appropriate Virtual Acoustic Environments: A Database of High-Resolution HRTF Measurements and 3D-Scans of Children

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19010324

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head-related transfer function; spatial hearing; children; binaural technology; 3D-scan; HRTF database

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Head-related transfer functions (HRTFs) play an important role in simulating acoustic environments, but datasets of HRTFs for children are lacking. In this study, HRTFs of 5-10 years old children were measured and compared to adult participants. The results showed that the KEMAR artificial head does not represent the average child HRTF, suggesting the need for child-specific HRTFs in future studies.
Head-related transfer functions (HRTFs) play a significant role in modern acoustic experiment designs in the auralization of 3-dimensional virtual acoustic environments. This technique enables us to create close to real-life situations including room-acoustic effects, background noise and multiple sources in a controlled laboratory environment. While adult HRTF databases are widely available to the research community, datasets of children are not. To fill this gap, children aged 5-10 years old were recruited among 1st and 2nd year primary school children in Aachen, Germany. Their HRTFs were measured in the hemi-anechoic chamber with a 5-degree x 5-degree resolution. Special care was taken to reduce artifacts from motion during the measurements by means of fast measurement routines. To complement the HRTF measurements with the anthropometric data needed for individualization methods, a high-resolution 3D-scan of the head and upper torso of each participant was recorded. The HRTF measurement took around 3 min. The children's head movement during that time was larger compared to adult participants in comparable experiments but was generally kept within 5 degrees of rotary and 1 cm of translatory motion. Adult participants only exhibit this range of motion in longer duration measurements. A comparison of the HRTF measurements to the KEMAR artificial head shows that it is not representative of an average child HRTF. Difference can be seen in both the spectrum and in the interaural time delay (ITD) with differences of 70 mu s on average and a maximum difference of 138 mu s. For both spectrum and ITD, the KEMAR more closely resembles the 95th percentile of range of children's data. This warrants a closer look at using child specific HRTFs in the binaural presentation of virtual acoustic environments in the future.

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