The audiogram predicts <30% of the variance in speech-reception thresholds (SRTs) for hearing-impaired (HI) listeners fitted with individualized frequency-dependent gain. The remaining variance could reflect suprathreshold distortion in the auditory pathways or nonauditory factors such as cognitive processing. The relationship between a measure of suprathreshold auditory function - spectrotemporal modulation (STM) sensitivity - and SRTs in noise was examined for 154 HI listeners fitted with individualized frequency-specific gain. SRTs were measured for 65-dB SPL sentences presented in speech-weighted noise or four-talker babble to an individually programmed master hearing aid, with the output of an ear-simulating coupler played through insert earphones. Modulation-depth detection thresholds were measured over headphones for STM (2cycles/octave density, 4-Hz rate) applied to an 85-dB SPL, 2-kHz lowpass-filtered pink-noise carrier. SRTs were correlated with both the high-frequency (2-6 kHz) pure-tone average (HFA; R2=.31) and STM sensitivity (R2=.28). Combined with the HFA, STM sensitivity significantly improved the SRT prediction (Î"R2=.13; total R2=.44). The remaining unaccounted variance might be attributable to variability in cognitive function and other dimensions of suprathreshold distortion. STM sensitivity was most critical in predicting SRTs for listeners < 65 years old or with HFA <53 dB HL. Results are discussed in the context of previous work suggesting that STM sensitivity for low rates and low-frequency carriers is impaired by a reduced ability to use temporal fine-structure information to detect dynamic spectra. STM detection is a fast test of suprathreshold auditory function for frequencies <2 kHz that complements the HFA to predict variability in hearing-aid outcomes for speech perception in noise.
CITATION STYLE
Bernstein, J. G. W., Danielsson, H., Hällgren, M., Stenfelt, S., Rönnberg, J., & Lunner, T. (2016). Spectrotemporal Modulation Sensitivity as a Predictor of Speech-Reception Performance in Noise with Hearing Aids. In Trends in Hearing (Vol. 20). SAGE Publications Inc. https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216516670387
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