Affiliation:
1. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia
Abstract
An experiment was conducted to compare both speech intelligibility and noise attenuation of a conventional passive headset (David Clark H10-76) and an electronic Active Noise Reduction (ANR)headset (Bose Aviation) operated with and without its ANR feature. Modified Rhyme Tests were conducted in pink and tank noise, and with and without bilateral phase reversal between earphones. The Bose ANR unit required a significantly higher speech-to-noise (S/N) ratio in both noise environments than the two passive headset systems to maintain equal intelligibility, in part because of its stronger noise reduction and higher required signal level. Articulation Index calculations corroborated the empirical result that the David Clark afforded comparable intelligibility to the Bose ANR device. Bilateral phase reversal proved to be of no benefit, and pink noise proved to be the harsher environment for speech intelligibility. On a speech intelligibility basis alone, the results do not justify the additional cost of the ANR headset; however, when severe noise exposure is at issue, a properly functioning ANR unit may afford more protection than a similar passive headset without electronics, especially in low-frequency noise spectra.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology,Human Factors and Ergonomics
Reference25 articles.
1. Bartholomae, R. C., and Stein, R. R. (1990). Active noise cancellation-performance in a hearing protector under ideal and degraded conditions. In Proceedings of NOISE CON 90 (pp. 151–155). Austin: University of Texas.
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