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Speech reception in quiet and in noisy conditions by individuals with noise-induced hearing loss in relation to their audiogram

G. F. Smoorenburg
- Vol. 90, pp 13692
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TLDR
In this article, the authors measured tone audiograms and speech-reception thresholds in 200 individuals (400 ears) with noise-induced hearing loss and found that hearing loss in the regions above 3 kHz, from 1 to 3 kHz and below 1 kHz was related to speech reception in noise.
Abstract
Tone thresholds and speech-reception thresholds were measured in 200 individuals (400 ears) with noise-induced hearing loss. The speech-reception thresholds were measured in a quiet condition and in noise with a speech spectrum at levels of 35, 50, 65, and 80 dBA. The tone audiograms could be described by three principal components: hearing loss in the regions above 3 kHz, from 1 to 3 kHz and below 1 kHz; the speech thresholds could be described by two components: speech reception in quiet and speech reception in noise at 50-80 dBA. Hearing loss above 1 kHz was related to speech reception in noise; hearing loss at and below 1 kHz to speech reception in quiet. The correlation between the speech thresholds in quiet and in noise was only R = 0.45. An adequate predictor of the speech threshold in noise, the primary factor in the hearing handicap, was the pure-tone average at 2 and 4 kHz (PTA2,4, R = 0.72). The minimum value of the prediction error for any tone-audiometric predictor of this speech threshold was 1.2 dB (standard deviation). The prediction could not be improved by taking into account the critical ratio for low-frequency noise nor by its upward spread of masking. The prediction error is due to measurement error and to a factor common to both ears. The latter factor is ascribed to cognitive skill in speech reception. Hearing loss above 10 to 15 dB HL (hearing level) already shows an effect on the speech threshold in noise, a noticeable handicap is found at PTA2,4 = 30 dB HL.

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Citations
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Estimated prevalence of noise-induced hearing threshold shifts among children 6 to 19 years of age: the third national health and nutrition examination survey, 1988-1994, united states

TL;DR: The prevalence estimate of noise-induced hearing threshold shifts among US children suggests that children are being exposed to excessive amounts of hazardous levels of noise, and children's hearing is vulnerable to these exposures.
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Listening Effort: How the Cognitive Consequences of Acoustic Challenge Are Reflected in Brain and Behavior.

TL;DR: The authors review converging behavioral, pupillometric, and neuroimaging evidence that understanding acoustically degraded speech requires additional cognitive support and that this cognitive load can interfere with other operations such as language processing and memory for what has been heard.
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Development and validation of an automatic speech-in-noise screening test by telephone.

TL;DR: A new Dutch speech-in-noise test was developed, made fully automatic, controlled by a computer, and can be done by telephone, which measures the speech reception threshold using an adaptive procedure, and showed no significant influence of telephone type or listening environment.
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Method for the selection of sentence materials for efficient measurement of the speech reception threshold.

TL;DR: A method is described to select sentence materials for efficient measurement of the speech reception threshold (SRT), and the result is a set of 1272 sentences, where every sentence has been uttered by two male and two female speakers.
Book

Cochlear hearing loss : physiological, psychological and technical issues

TL;DR: Cochlear hearing loss: Physiological, Psychological and technical issues, Cochlear Hearing loss:physiological, psychological and technical problems, کتابجیتال - آذرسا.
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