JOURNAL ARTICLE

Factors affecting masking release for speech in modulated noise for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners

Erwin L. J. GeorgeJoost Μ. FestenTammo Houtgast

Year: 2006 Journal:   The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol: 120 (4)Pages: 2295-2311   Publisher: Acoustical Society of America

Abstract

The Speech Reception Threshold for sentences in stationary noise and in several amplitude-modulated noises was measured for 8 normal-hearing listeners, 29 sensorineural hearing-impaired listeners, and 16 normal-hearing listeners with simulated hearing loss. This approach makes it possible to determine whether the reduced benefit from masker modulations, as often observed for hearing-impaired listeners, is due to a loss of signal audibility, or due to suprathreshold deficits, such as reduced spectral and temporal resolution, which were measured in four separate psychophysical tasks. Results show that the reduced masking release can only partly be accounted for by reduced audibility, and that, when considering suprathreshold deficits, the normal effects associated with a raised presentation level should be taken into account. In this perspective, reduced spectral resolution does not appear to qualify as an actual suprathreshold deficit, while reduced temporal resolution does. Temporal resolution and age are shown to be the main factors governing masking release for speech in modulated noise, accounting for more than half of the intersubject variance. Their influence appears to be related to the processing of mainly the higher stimulus frequencies. Results based on calculations of the Speech Intelligibility Index in modulated noise confirm these conclusions.

Keywords:
Audiology Stimulus (psychology) Masking (illustration) Hearing impaired Sensorineural hearing loss Noise (video) Hearing loss Acoustics Intelligibility (philosophy) Psychology Computer science Physics Medicine

Metrics

185
Cited By
2.78
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
79
Refs
0.89
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

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

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