Noise-Robust Hearing Aid Voice Control López Espejo, Iván Roselló, Eros Edraki, Amin Harte, Naomi Jensen, Jesper Hearing aid Voice control Keyword spotting Noise robustness Bone-conducted speech Advancing the design of robust hearing aid (HA) voice control is crucial to increase the HA use rate among hard of hearing people as well as to improve HA users’ experience. In this work, we contribute towards this goal by, first, presenting a novel HA speech dataset consisting of noisy own voice captured by 2 behind-the-ear (BTE) and 1 in-ear-canal (IEC) microphones. Second, we provide baseline HA voice control results from the evaluation of light, state-of-the-art keyword spotting mod- els utilizing different combinations of HA microphone signals. Experimental results show the benefits of exploiting bandwidth- limited bone-conducted speech (BCS) from the IEC microphone to achieve noise-robust HA voice control. Furthermore, results also demonstrate that voice control performance can be boosted by assisting BCS by the broader-bandwidth BTE microphone signals. Aiming at setting a baseline upon which the scientific community can continue to progress, the HA noisy speech dataset has been made publicly available. 2024-12-11T10:16:37Z 2024-12-11T10:16:37Z 2024-12-09 journal article Published version: López Espejo, Iván et al. Noise-Robust Hearing Aid Voice Control. IEEE Signal Processing Letters. DOI:10.48550/arXiv.2411.03150 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/97890 10.48550/arXiv.2411.03150 eng open access IEEE