The Effect of Adaptive Nonlinear Frequency Compression on Phoneme Perception

Author:

Glista Danielle1,Hawkins Marianne1,Bohnert Andrea2,Rehmann Julia3,Wolfe Jace4,Scollie Susan1

Affiliation:

1. Child Amplification Laboratory, National Centre for Audiology, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada

2. Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Division of Communication Disorders, University Medicine of the Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany

3. Phonak AG, Staefa, Switzerland

4. Hearts for Hearing, Oklahoma City

Abstract

Purpose This study implemented a fitting method, developed for use with frequency lowering hearing aids, across multiple testing sites, participants, and hearing aid conditions to evaluate speech perception with a novel type of frequency lowering. Method A total of 8 participants, including children and young adults, participated in real-world hearing aid trials. A blinded crossover design, including posttrial withdrawal testing, was used to assess aided phoneme perception. The hearing aid conditions included adaptive nonlinear frequency compression (NFC), static NFC, and conventional processing. Results Enabling either adaptive NFC or static NFC improved group-level detection and recognition results for some high-frequency phonemes, when compared with conventional processing. Mean results for the distinction component of the Phoneme Perception Test (Schmitt, Winkler, Boretzki, & Holube, 2016) were similar to those obtained with conventional processing. Conclusions Findings suggest that both types of NFC tested in this study provided a similar amount of speech perception benefit, when compared with group-level performance with conventional hearing aid technology. Individual-level results are presented with discussion around patterns of results that differ from the group average.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing

Reference31 articles.

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3. American Academy of Audiology. (2013). American Academy of Audiology Clinical Practice Guidelines: Pediatric amplification. Retrieved from http://audiology-web.s3.amazonaws.com/migrated/PediatricAmplificationGuidelines.pdf_539975b3e7e9f1.74471798.pdf

4. The Bkb (Bamford-Kowal-Bench) Sentence Lists for Partially-Hearing Children

5. Spectral Distribution of /s/ and the Frequency Response of Hearing Aids

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