The Effect of Stimulation Position and Ear Canal Occlusion on Perception of Bone Conducted Sound

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Abstract

The position of a bone conduction (BC) transducer influences the perception of BC sound, but the relation between the stimulation position and BC sound perception is not entirely clear. In the current study, eleven participants with normal hearing were evaluated for their hearing thresholds and speech intelligibility for three stimulation positions (temple, mastoid, and condyle) and four types of ear canal occlusion produced by headphones. In addition, the sound quality for three types of music was rated with stimulation at the three positions. Stimulation at the condyle gave the best performance while the temple showed the worst performance for hearing thresholds, speech intelligibility, and sound quality. The in-ear headphones gave the highest occlusion effect while fully open headphones gave the least occlusion effect. BC stimulated speech intelligibility improved with greater occlusion, especially for the temple stimulation position. The results suggest that BC stimulation at the condyle is generally superior to the other positions tested in terms of sensitivity, clarity, and intelligibility, and that occlusion with ordinary headphones improves the BC signal.

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Wang, J., Stenfelt, S., Wu, S., Yan, Z., Sang, J., Zheng, C., & Li, X. (2022). The Effect of Stimulation Position and Ear Canal Occlusion on Perception of Bone Conducted Sound. Trends in Hearing, 26. https://doi.org/10.1177/23312165221130185

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