Recognition of nonsense syllables by hearing-impaired listeners and by noise-masked normal hearers

  • Humes L
  • Dirks D
  • Bell T
  • et al.
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Abstract

In the present study, speech-recognition performance was measured in four hearing-impaired subjects and twelve normal hearers. The normal hearers were divided into four groups of three subjects each. Speech-recognition testing for the normal hearers was accomplished in a background of spectrally shaped noise in which the noise was shaped to produce masked thresholds identical to the quiet thresholds of one of the hearing-impaired subjects. The question addressed in this study is whether normal hearers with a hearing loss simulated through a shaped masking noise demonstrate speech-recognition difficulties similar to those of listeners with actual hearing impairment. Regarding overall percent-correct scores, the results indicated that two of the four hearing-impaired subjects performed better than their corresponding subgroup of noise-masked normal hearers, whereas the other two impaired listeners performed like the noise-masked normal listeners. A gross analysis of the types of errors made suggested that subjects with actual and simulated losses frequently made different types of errors.

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APA

Humes, L. E., Dirks, D. D., Bell, T. S., & Kincaid, G. E. (1987). Recognition of nonsense syllables by hearing-impaired listeners and by noise-masked normal hearers. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 81(3), 765–773. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.394845

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