Dear subscribers of the colloquium newsletter, we are pleased to announce the next date of our Communication Technology Colloquium: *Wednesday, June 23, 2021* *Speaker:* Markus Tilichi *Tim*e: 11:00 a.m. *Location*: https://rwth.zoom.us/j/97904157921?pwd=SWpsbDl0MWhrWjY1ZkZaeFRoYmErZz09 Meeting-ID: 979 0415 7921 Passwort: 481650 *Master-Lecture*: Enhanced Own Voice Perception for Hearables Using Machine Learning Modern headphones implement sophisticated signal processing and control algorithms to improve the user’s hearing and listening experience. Especially new generation in-ear headphones, so-called hearables, integrate these technologies, such as active noise control, on a large scale. A remaining issue with hearables is the sound degradation introduced through sealing the ear canal. This degradation is called the Occlusion Effect. It is often described as boomy and hollow perception of the speaker’s own voice. While Active Noise Cancellation reduces ambient noise, the Occlusion Effect still persists. In order to improve the speaker’s own voice perception and alleviate the Occlusion Effect, it is required to play back some of the voice signal without amplifying ambient noise. In this thesis a novel approach for selective hear-through based on deep neural networks is investigated. Integrated into a feed-forward ANC topology the proposed neural network utilizes ambient and in-ear microphone signals for an estimation of the speaker’s own voice. Speech samples for both microphone signals were simulated through augmentation of the DARPA TIMIT speech corpus. This included virtually occluding the samples for one channel and adding real-world noise samples to the other. The proposed network was found to reduce ambient noise from the test dataset to a barely audible extent. Metrics for quality and intelligibility suggest superior denoising performance in comparison with one channel network benchmarks. Despite the relatively small training dataset, the network may also regularize well when trained with measurement data. All interested parties are cordially invited, registration is not required. General information about the colloquium, as well as a current time scale of the Communication Technology Colloquium can be found at: https://www.iks.rwth-aachen.de/atktuelles/kolloquium -- Irina Ronkartz Institute of Communication Systems (IKS) RWTH Aachen University Muffeter Weg 3a, 52074 Aachen, Germany +49 241 80 26958 (phone) ronkartz@iks.rwth-aachen.de http://www.iks.rwth-aachen.de/