The progress beyond the state of the art achieved during the 3DTI project can be summarised in the following points:
-The 3DTI Toolkit which includes several innovative functionalities in a single open-source library, available also as an executable application (for MacOS, Windows and Linux), and as a wrapper for Unity and Javascript. This research represents a contribution to the state of the art in acoustics and signal processing research, and is currently being published.
-A series of studies on Head Related Transfer Functions selection, adaptation and individualisation has been carried out during the project. This research represents a contribution to the area of acoustics and psychoacoustics research, and is currently being published.
-All 3DTI Applications have been created employing a participatory design approach, a series of AGILE development/evaluation loops, and a final summative evaluation which involved 319 participants. Data from these evaluations represent a contribution to the state of the art in human factors research and serious games, and is currently being published.
In terms of societal engagement, in addition to the participatory design and evaluation stages which involved more than 500 individuals (hearing aid users, hearing impaired individuals, audiologists, developers and general public), the project reached several communities through participation in conferences, workshops and seminars. Three major workshops were organised by 3DTI including a final launch event (Hearing Futures) at the London V&A Museum in April 2018. Attended by more than 100 participants, Hearing Futures sold out in a few days and a follow up event is being organised. A full list of dissemination and societal engagement activities can be found in the Dissemination and Communication Report (D5.4)
http://3d-tune-in.eu/Deliverables(öffnet in neuem Fenster). The highlight of the last year of the project has been the NHS CSO Healthcare Research Award, won by the project for the category of Healthcare Science Partnering Patients and Citizens (
http://3d-tune-in.eu/3d-tune-in-wins-nhs-award(öffnet in neuem Fenster))
The consortium is now moving in several directions aiming to carry forward activities started during the 3DTI project (www.hearingamestudio.com; www.pluggy-project.eu; www.scent-project.eu) and to set up new collaborations (Weizmann Institute of Science, Georgia Tech, University of Castilla La Mancha, AmpAmsterdam, Video Art, University College London, Tel-Aviv University) to further develop and exploit the 3DTI Toolkit.