Sonification system using synthesized realistic body sounds modified by other medically-important variables for physiological monitoring
First Claim
1. A sonification system for facilitating the interpretation of multi-variate physiological or medical data comprising:
- input means for receiving physiological or medical data,audio generating means for generating a realistic representation of bodily sound(s),means for varying acoustic aspects of the realistic representation in accordance with the physiological or medical input data, such that at least one variable of the input data alters the generated representation in a way literally reflective of its state and at least one variable of the input data alters the generated representation in a way only arbitrarily related to its state, wherein said means for varying further comprises automatic mixer means for combining the sound generated by the audio generating means with sounds from external sources and for controlling the amplitude level of the external sounds relative to the sounds generated by the audio generating means.
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Abstract
A method and apparatus are described for converting physiological information into sound, suitable for such applications as anesthesiological, intensive-care or exercise monitoring. Complex, realistic bodily sounds (e.g., heartbeat sound and/or breathing sound) are synthesized algorithmically, and directly reveal certain physiological variables such as heart rate or breathing rate. Changes in other physiological variables (e.g., blood pressure or carbon dioxide level) are indicated by changes in acoustic parameters of the realistic sound (e.g., pitch or timbre). A large number of these "piggyback" variables can be made audible by controlling a plurality of acoustic parameters simultaneously, taking advantage of the ability of the auditory system to process large quantities of information in parallel. The combination of realistic sounds with "piggyback" variables provides a novel means of monitoring physiological data with advantages over both the visual monitoring systems currently in widespread use and other proposed and existing sonic monitoring systems. Other improvements to existing sonification methods are taught, including "self-labeling" alarms and auxiliary sound mix-through.
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Citations
12 Claims
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1. A sonification system for facilitating the interpretation of multi-variate physiological or medical data comprising:
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input means for receiving physiological or medical data, audio generating means for generating a realistic representation of bodily sound(s), means for varying acoustic aspects of the realistic representation in accordance with the physiological or medical input data, such that at least one variable of the input data alters the generated representation in a way literally reflective of its state and at least one variable of the input data alters the generated representation in a way only arbitrarily related to its state, wherein said means for varying further comprises automatic mixer means for combining the sound generated by the audio generating means with sounds from external sources and for controlling the amplitude level of the external sounds relative to the sounds generated by the audio generating means. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)
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10. A sonification system for facilitating the interpretation of multi-variate data comprising:
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input means for receiving data, audio generating means for generating sound that emulates non-artificial sound(s), means for varying acoustic aspects of the generated sound in accordance with input data, such that at least one variable of the input data alters the generated sound in a way literally or analogically reflective of its state, and at least one variable of the input data alters the generated sound in a way only arbitrarily related to its state, said means for varying including automatic mixer means for combining the sound generated by the audio generating means with sound from external sources and for controlling the amplitude level of this external sound relative to the sound generated by the audio generating means. - View Dependent Claims (11, 12)
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Specification