Department of Special Education and Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska.
Center for Hearing Research, Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, Nebraska.
J Am Acad Audiol. 2022 Mar;33(3):170-180. doi: 10.1055/a-1678-3381. Epub 2021 Oct 25.
Adults and children with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) have trouble understanding speech in rooms with reverberation when using hearing aid amplification. While the use of amplitude compression signal processing in hearing aids may contribute to this difficulty, there is conflicting evidence on the effects of amplitude compression settings on speech recognition. Less clear is the effect of a fast release time for adults and children with SNHL when using compression ratios derived from a prescriptive procedure.
The aim of the study is to determine whether release time impacts speech recognition in reverberation for children and adults with SNHL and to determine if these effects of release time and reverberation can be predicted using indices of audibility or temporal and spectral distortion.
This is a quasi-experimental cohort study. Participants used a hearing aid simulator set to the Desired Sensation Level algorithm m[i/o] for three different amplitude compression release times. Reverberation was simulated using three different reverberation times.
Participants were 20 children and 16 adults with SNHL.
Participants were seated in a sound-attenuating booth and then nonsense syllable recognition was measured. Predictions of speech recognition were made using indices of audibility, temporal distortion, and spectral distortion and the effects of release time and reverberation were analyzed using linear mixed models.
While nonsense syllable recognition decreased in reverberation release time did not significantly affect nonsense syllable recognition. Participants with lower audibility were more susceptible to the negative effect of reverberation on nonsense syllable recognition.
We have extended previous work on the effects of reverberation on aided speech recognition to children with SNHL. Variations in release time did not impact the understanding of speech. An index of audibility best predicted nonsense syllable recognition in reverberation and, clinically, these results suggest that patients with less audibility are more susceptible to nonsense syllable recognition in reverberation.
患有感音神经性听力损失 (SNHL) 的成人和儿童在使用助听器放大声音时,在混响的房间里理解言语会有困难。虽然助听器中使用幅度压缩信号处理可能会导致这种困难,但幅度压缩设置对言语识别的影响存在相互矛盾的证据。对于使用从规定程序得出的压缩比的 SNHL 成人和儿童,释放时间的影响不太清楚。
本研究旨在确定释放时间是否会影响患有 SNHL 的儿童和成人在混响中的言语识别,并确定释放时间和混响的这些影响是否可以使用可听度或时间和频谱失真的指标来预测。
这是一项准实验队列研究。参与者使用助听器模拟器设置为 Desired Sensation Level 算法 m[i/o],用于三种不同的幅度压缩释放时间。使用三种不同的混响时间模拟混响。
参与者为 20 名患有 SNHL 的儿童和 16 名成人。
参与者坐在隔音亭中,然后测量无意义音节识别。使用可听度、时间失真和频谱失真指数预测言语识别,并使用线性混合模型分析释放时间和混响的影响。
虽然无意义音节识别在混响中下降,但释放时间的变化并没有显著影响无意义音节识别。可听度较低的参与者更容易受到混响对无意义音节识别的负面影响。
我们将关于混响对助听语音识别影响的先前工作扩展到患有 SNHL 的儿童。释放时间的变化不会影响言语理解。可听度指数最能预测混响中的无意义音节识别,从临床角度来看,这些结果表明可听度较低的患者在混响中更难识别无意义音节。