JOURNAL ARTICLE

Decision strategies of hearing-impaired listeners in spectral shape discrimination

Jennifer J. LentzMarjorie R. Leek

Year: 2002 Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol: 111 (3)Pages: 1389-1398   Publisher: Acoustical Society of America

Abstract

The ability to discriminate between sounds with different spectral shapes was evaluated for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. Listeners detected a 920-Hz tone added in phase to a single component of a standard consisting of the sum of five tones spaced equally on a logarithmic frequency scale ranging from 200 to 4200 Hz. An overall level randomization of 10 dB was either present or absent. In one subset of conditions, the no-perturbation conditions, the standard stimulus was the sum of equal-amplitude tones. In the perturbation conditions, the amplitudes of the components within a stimulus were randomly altered on every presentation. For both perturbation and no-perturbation conditions, thresholds for the detection of the 920-Hz tone were measured to compare sensitivity to changes in spectral shape between normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. To assess whether hearing-impaired listeners relied on different regions of the spectrum to discriminate between sounds, spectral weights were estimated from the perturbed standards by correlating the listener’s responses with the level differences per component across two intervals of a two-alternative forced-choice task. Results showed that hearing-impaired and normal-hearing listeners had similar sensitivity to changes in spectral shape. On average, across-frequency correlation functions also were similar for both groups of listeners, suggesting that as long as all components are audible and well separated in frequency, hearing-impaired listeners can use information across frequency as well as normal-hearing listeners. Analysis of the individual data revealed, however, that normal-hearing listeners may be better able to adopt optimal weighting schemes. This conclusion is only tentative, as differences in internal noise may need to be considered to interpret the results obtained from weighting studies between normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners.

Keywords:
Hearing impaired Audiology Stimulus (psychology) Acoustics Amplitude Mathematics Logarithmic scale Spectral shape analysis Logarithm Psychology Spectral line Physics Medicine Mathematical analysis

Metrics

22
Cited By
0.64
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
28
Refs
0.62
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Speech and Audio Processing
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Signal Processing
Noise Effects and Management
Health Sciences →  Health Professions →  Speech and Hearing

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Spectral shape discrimination by hearing-impaired and normal-hearing listeners

Jennifer J. LentzMarjorie R. Leek

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2003 Vol: 113 (3)Pages: 1604-1616
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Spectral-peak selection in spectral-shape discrimination by normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners

Jennifer J. Lentz

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2006 Vol: 120 (2)Pages: 945-956
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Spectral shape discrimination and speech identification in noise in elderly hearing-impaired listeners

Mini N. Shrivastav

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 2006 Vol: 120 (5_Supplement)Pages: 3347-3347
JOURNAL ARTICLE

The effect of temporal waveform shape on spectral discrimination by normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners

Marjorie R. LeekVan Summers

Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Year: 1993 Vol: 94 (4)Pages: 2074-2082
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.