Artigo Revisado por pares

Enhanced speech perception at low signal‐to‐noise ratios with multichannel compression hearing aids

1995; Acoustical Society of America; Volume: 97; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1121/1.412232

ISSN

1520-9024

Autores

E. William Yund, Krista M. Buckles,

Tópico(s)

Speech and Audio Processing

Resumo

The effect of the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) on speech discrimination was measured for two types of hearing-aid amplification, (1) full-range multichannel compression with eight independent frequency bands and (2) frequency-equalized linear amplification. Signal-to-noise ratios from −5 to 15 dB with speech-spectrum noise (at 70 dB SPL) and two voices (male and female) were used. The effect of S/N differed for the two aid types: As the S/N decreased, speech discrimination became relatively better with the multichannel compression hearing aid (MCCHA) in comparison to the linear amplification hearing aid (LAHA). Furthermore, this shift in MCCHA–LAHA performance occurred for every subject, independent of which aid produced better overall performance. Of 16 hearing-impaired subjects, 7 showed significantly better overall speech discrimination with the MCCHA than with the LAHA, 5 showed no difference, and 4 showed significantly better discrimination with the LAHA. Hearing-loss severity and MCCHA performance also were related: Subjects with less severe impairments showed greater improvement with the MCCHA. In a normal-hearing listener, the speech discrimination deficit produced by these MCCHAs was small and not statistically significant in most cases. Taken together, these results indicate that a full-range eight-channel MCCHA, for a mild to moderately severe hearing loss, causes little information degradation and can be of great benefit for speech discrimination in noise, particularly at low S/N.

Referência(s)