4.3 Article

Influence of aided audibility on speech recognition performance with frequency composition for children and adults

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AUDIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 11, Pages 849-857

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14992027.2021.1893839

Keywords

Hearing aids; speech perception; paediatric; psychoacoustics; hearing science

Funding

  1. NIH/NIDCD [T35DC008757]

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The study aimed to evaluate the impact of speech audibility on speech recognition with frequency composition in hearing aids. Participants, including children and adults with hearing loss, were tested for word and sentence recognition thresholds with and without frequency composition. Results showed that better aided speech audibility led to better speech recognition in noise, and changes in word recognition threshold in children were predictable from aided speech audibility. Further research is needed to generalize these findings to a larger participant pool and different stimuli.
Objective The primary purpose of this project was to evaluate the influence of speech audibility on speech recognition with frequency composition, a frequency-lowering algorithm used in hearing aids. Design Participants were tested to determine word and sentence recognition thresholds in background noise, with and without frequency composition. The audibility of speech was quantified using the speech intelligibility index (SII). Study Sample Participants included 17 children (ages 6-16) and 21 adults (ages 19 to 72) with bilateral mild-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss. Results Word and sentence recognition thresholds did not change significantly with frequency composition. Participants with better aided speech audibility had better speech recognition in noise, regardless of processing condition, than those with poorer aided audibility. For the child participants, changes in the word recognition threshold between processing conditions were predictable from aided speech audibility. However, this relationship depended strongly on one participant with a low SII and otherwise, changes in speech recognition between frequency composition off and on were not predicable from aided speech audibility. Conclusion While these results suggest that children who have a low-aided SII may benefit from frequency composition, further data are needed to generalise these findings to a greater number of participants and variety of stimuli.

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