Affiliation:
1. Indiana University Bloomington
Abstract
Purpose
This study examined how repeated presentations of words in noise affected understanding of both trained and untrained words in noise (in isolation and in sentences).
Method
Eight older listeners with hearing impairment completed a word-based auditory training protocol lasting approximately 12 weeks. Training materials were presented in a closed-set condition with both orthographic and auditory feedback on a trial-to-trial basis. Performance on both trained and untrained lexically easy and hard words, as well as generalization to sentences, was measured. Listeners then returned for an additional 14 weeks to monitor retention of the trained materials.
Results
Training listeners on 1 set of words improved both their open- and closed-set recognition of the trained materials but did not improve performance on another set of untrained words. When training switched to the other set, performance for the new set of words improved significantly, whereas significant improvements on the previously trained words were maintained. Training generalized to unfamiliar talkers but did not generalize to untrained words or untrained keywords within running speech. Listeners were able to maintain improved performance over an extended period.
Conclusion
Older listeners were able to improve their word-recognition performance in noise on a set of 150 words with training.
Publisher
American Speech Language Hearing Association
Subject
Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference20 articles.
1. Sentence recognition materials based on frequency of word use and lexical confusability;Bell T.;Journal of the American Academy of Audiology,2001
2. Research in auditory training;Blamey P.;Journal of the Academy of Rehabilitative Audiology (Suppl. 27),1994
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