Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to...

9
Review of the Development of TIA-1083

Transcript of Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to...

Page 1: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Review of the Development of TIA-1083

Page 2: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Consumer Complaints

In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid interference problems with digital cordless telephones.

Specifically consumers were hearing a buzz noise when using digital cordless telephones with hearing aids and cochlear implants when set to T-Coil mode.

There were no reports of the buzz noise from analog cordless telephones.

Page 3: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Industry Response

At the August 2004 meeting of TIA Subcommittee TR41.3 a Gallaudet University presentation on the subject was discussed along with possible causes for the reported interference.

The consensus belief was that, due to the low RF power levels used by cordless phones, the source of the reported interference was probably magnetic.

Further work towards confirming this belief and developing a testing method to characterize the magnetic interference was conducted during the remainder of 2004 and first half of 2005.

Page 4: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Industry Response

• First, the complaint phones were tested for compliance with the FCC Part 68.316 HAC regulations. The test results confirmed that all of the phones were compliant.

• Next, the complaint phones were tested with hearing aids obtained from and programmed by Gallaudet University. This testing confirmed that digital spread spectrum cordless telephones were indeed causing interference to hearing aids. (This testing also confirmed that analog cordless telephones did not cause interference.)

Page 5: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Why was this happening?

Analysis of the noise characteristics indicated that the source of the noise was the Time Division Duplexing (TDD) employed by the Digital Spread Spectrum (DSS) cordless phones to enable them to transmit and receive on the same frequency.

This turning on and off of the transmitter at a very rapid rate resulted in large changes in battery current which in turn caused large changes in the magnetic field produced by the wiring in the handset.

This magnetic pulsing was being picked up by the T-Coil in the hearing aid and heard as a loud

buzzing noise by the wearer.

Page 6: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

HLAA Studies

2005 HLAA National ConventionStudy conducted by Linda Kozma-Spytek of the Rehabilitation Engineering and Research Center (RERC) on Telecommunications Access and the Technology Access Program at Gallaudet University.

Volunteers from among the HLAA Convention attendees tested a group of phones and rated their performance.

– Loudness– Percent Words Understood– Interference– Usability– “Would you buy a phone with this level of

interference?”

Page 7: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

HLAA Studies

2006 HLAA National Convention

Study conducted by Gallaudet University, Etymotic Research and Motorola.

Volunteers from among the HLAA attendees participated in this study and helped to answer the question:

“How much noise is too much noise?”

Page 8: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

TIA Completes Development of New Standard

Results from the two HLAA Studies were compared with lab measurements by TIA member companies.

Performance Requirements were Established

Compliant phones were tested by wearers of hearing aids and cochlear implants with good results.

ANSI/TIA-1083 “Handset Magnetic Measurement Procedures and Performance Requirements” was published in March 2007.

Official “TIA-1083” logo was developed and licensed by TIA to manufacturers for display on the packaging of compliant products.

Page 9: Review of the Development of TIA-1083. Consumer Complaints In 2004, telephone manufacturers began to receive customer complaints regarding hearing aid.

Official TIA-1083 Logo

Compliant products with this logo are currently widely available in the market.

T

Compatible withHearing Aid T-Coil

TIA-1083