Use of a Loudness Model for Hearing-Aid Fitting. I. Linear Hearing Aids
1998; Informa; Volume: 32; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.3109/03005364000000083
ISSN1471-2849
AutoresBrian C. J. Moore, Brian R. Glasberg,
Tópico(s)Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics
ResumoA model for predicting loudness for people with cochlear hearing loss is applied to the problem of prescribing the frequency-gain characteristic of a linear hearing aid. It is argued that a reasonable goal is to make all frequency bands of speech equally loud while achieving a comfortable overall loudness; this can maximize the proportion of the speech spectrum that is above the absolute threshold for a given loudness. In terms of the model this means that the specific loudness pattern evoked by speech of a moderate level (65 dB SPL) should be reasonably flat (equal loudness per critical band), and the overall loudness should be similar to that evoked in a normal listener by 65 dB speech (about 23 sones). The model is used to develop a new formula - the 'Cambridge formula' - for prescribing insertion gain from audiometric thresholds. It is shown that, for a fixed overall loudness of 23 sones, the Cambridge formula leads to a higher calculated articulation index than three other commonly used prescriptive methods: NAL(R), FIG6 and DSL.
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