Levitt H, Bakke M, Kates J, Neuman A, Schwander T, Weiss M
Center for Research in Speech and Hearing Sciences, Graduate School, City University of New York, NY 10036.
Scand Audiol Suppl. 1993;38:7-19.
Four noise reduction methods for use in sensory aids for hearing impairment were evaluated. These include a two-microphone adaptive noise canceller, short-term Wiener filtering, a transformed spectrum subtraction technique, and sinusoidal modelling. The largest improvements in speech recognition were obtained with the two-microphone adaptive noise canceller in a moderately reverberant room. Significant improvements were also obtained for short-term Wiener filtering for some hearing-impaired subjects. The transformed spectrum-subtraction technique failed to improve performance as the front-end of a hearing aid, but yielded improvements in performance as a preprocessor for the Nucleus Cochlear Implant. Sinusoidal modelling resulted in significant improvements in signal-to-noise ratio, but without a corresponding improvement in speech intelligibility.