Tim Jürgens, Peter Ihly, Jürgen Tchorz, Takanori Nishiyama, Chiemi Tanaka, Daisuke Suzuki, Seiichi Shinden, Tsubasa Kitama, Kaoru Ogawa, Johannes Zaar, Søren Laugesen, Gary Jones, Marianna Vatti, Sébastien Santurette
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The combination of directional microphones (DIR) and spectral noise reduction (NR) is a common technique in hearing aid signal processing, for improving speech intelligibility in spatial acoustic scenarios. The benefit from DIR + NR varies considerably across individuals, which impedes prescribing the optimal strength of such processing during hearing aid fitting. The goal of this study was to investigate the correlation of four audiological factors with the benefit of speech reception thresholds (SRTs) from DIR + NR: the closedness of the acoustic coupling in the ear canal, audible contrast thresholds test (ACT™), the audiogram, and age. As part of a larger field study, 123 experienced hearing aid users in two centers in Germany and Japan were fitted bilaterally with the same hearing aids. SRTs were obtained with and without strong DIR + NR in a spatial speech-in-noise scenario before and after the field trials. Closedness of acoustic coupling was found to have the strongest correlation with SRT benefit from DIR + NR (most likely dominated by DIR rather than NR processing), followed by audible contrast thresholds (ACT) and the audiogram, both with the same significantly weaker correlation. Age was not correlated with the benefit from DIR + NR. The results suggest fitting hearing aid users irrespective of age with as-closed-as-possible acoustic coupling to maximize the benefit of DIR + NR. Furthermore, the closedness of acoustic coupling in combination with ACT or the audiogram may serve audiologists in predicting individual speech intelligibility benefits from strong DIR + NR for better guidance to set its strength during hearing aid fitting.
Trends in HearingAUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGYOTORH-OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
11.10%
发文量
44
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍:
Trends in Hearing is an open access journal completely dedicated to publishing original research and reviews focusing on human hearing, hearing loss, hearing aids, auditory implants, and aural rehabilitation. Under its former name, Trends in Amplification, the journal established itself as a forum for concise explorations of all areas of translational hearing research by leaders in the field. Trends in Hearing has now expanded its focus to include original research articles, with the goal of becoming the premier venue for research related to human hearing and hearing loss.