Abstract
Speech perception was tested in high level noise under controlled laboratory conditions in noise-exposed workmen and normal subjects, with and without a hearing protector. The group was further divided by age and English fluency, the latter group being included because of the high proportion of non-fluent English speakers in the Canadian workforce. In normal-hearing subjects the highest discrimination scores were found without background noise, they were lower with white noise as a masker, and even lower with crowd noise as a masker; wearing of a protector had no effect on intelligibility. The results for non-fluent English speakers were parallel with these results, but the scores were lower in all test conditions. In the presence of a high frequency hearing loss speech discrimination was lower than in the normals in quiet and in noise. The addition of a hearing protector dropped their discrimination score even further. In a flat hearing loss, wearing of a protector also worsened the speech discrimination score. The results are discussed.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Abel, S. M., Alberti, P. W., & Riko, K. (1981). SPEECH INTELLIGIBILITY IN NOISE WITH EAR PROTECTORS. Acoustics and Noise Control in Canada, 9(3), 40–49. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.2016366
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