1. Clinical evaluation of a new hearing aid anti-cardioid directivity pattern.
- Author
-
Mueller HG, Weber J, and Bellanova M
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Audiometry, Pure-Tone, Auditory Threshold, Female, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Noise adverse effects, Perceptual Masking, Persons with Hearing Disabilities psychology, Psychoacoustics, Recognition, Psychology, Speech Reception Threshold Test, Algorithms, Correction of Hearing Impairment psychology, Hearing Aids, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural rehabilitation, Persons with Hearing Disabilities rehabilitation, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this research was to evaluate a new directional hearing aid algorithm which automatically adapts to an anti-cardioid pattern in background noise when a speech signal originates from behind the hearing aid user., Design: Using the hearing-in-noise-test (HINT) in the soundfield, with the sentences delivered adaptively from the back (180°) and the standard HINT competing noise from the front (0°; 72 dB SPL), the participants were tested for three different hearing aid conditions: omnidirectional, conventional adaptive directional, and adaptive directional with the anti-cardioid algorithm enabled., Study Sample: Adults (n = 21) with bilaterally symmetrical downward sloping sensorineural hearing loss; experienced hearing aid users and aided bilaterally for experimental testing., Results: Results revealed a significant effect for the hearing aid microphone setting (p < .0001), with a HINT mean RTS of 4.2 dB for conventional adaptive directional, -0.1 dB for omnidirectional, and -5.7 dB when the anti-cardioid algorithm was active. This was a large effect size (Cohen's f2)., Conclusion: The findings suggest that the signal classification system steered the algorithm correctly, and that when implemented, the anti-cardioid polar pattern resulted in an improvement in speech recognition in background noise for this listening situation.
- Published
- 2011
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