Directional Effects on Infants and Young Children in Real Life: Implications for Amplification

Author:

Ching Teresa Y. C.1,O’Brien Anna2,Dillon Harvey3,Chalupper Josef4,Hartley Lisa2,Hartley David2,Raicevich George2,Hain Jens5

Affiliation:

1. National Acoustic Laboratories, Chatswood, New South Wales, Australia, and The HEARing Cooperative Research Centre, Victoria, Australia

2. National Acoustic Laboratories

3. National Acoustic Laboratories and The HEARing Cooperative Research Centre

4. Siemens Audiologische Technik GmbH (Siemens Hearing Instruments), Erlangen, Germany

5. Siemens Audiologische Technik GmbH (Siemens Hearing Instruments)

Abstract

Purpose This study examined the head orientation of young children in naturalistic settings and the acoustics of their everyday environments for quantifying the potential effects of directionality. Method Twenty-seven children (11 with normal hearing, 16 with impaired hearing) between 11 and 78 months of age were video recorded in naturalistic settings for analyses of head orientation. Reports on daily activities were obtained from caregivers. The effect of directionality in different environments was quantified by measuring the Speech Transmission Index (STI; H. J. M. Steeneken & T. Houtgast, 1980). Results Averaged across 4 scenarios, children looked in the direction of a talker for 40% of the time when speech was present. Head orientation was not affected by age or hearing status. The STI measurements revealed a directional advantage of 3 dB when a child looked at a talker but a deficit of 2.8 dB when the talker was sideways or behind the child. The overall directional effect in real life was between −0.4 and 0.2 dB. Conclusions The findings suggest that directional microphones in personal hearing devices for young children are not detrimental and have much potential for benefits in real life. The benefits may be enhanced by fitting directionality early and by counseling caregivers on ways to maximize benefits in everyday situations.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

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