Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids

A major decision at the time of hearing aid fitting and dispensing is the amount of amplification to provide listeners (both adult and pediatric populations) for the appropriate compensation of sensorineural hearing impairment across a range of frequencies (e.g., 160?10000?Hz) and input levels (e.g....

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Main Author: Johnson, Earl E.
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1705
https://doi.org/10.1177/1084713813506301
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spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etsu-works-27312019-05-16T05:03:18Z Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids Johnson, Earl E. A major decision at the time of hearing aid fitting and dispensing is the amount of amplification to provide listeners (both adult and pediatric populations) for the appropriate compensation of sensorineural hearing impairment across a range of frequencies (e.g., 160?10000?Hz) and input levels (e.g., 50?75?dB sound pressure level). This article describes modern prescription theory for hearing aids within the context of a risk versus return trade-off and efficient frontier analyses. The expected return of amplification recommendations (i.e., generic prescriptions such as National Acoustic Laboratories?Non-Linear 2, NAL-NL2, and Desired Sensation Level Multiple Input/Output, DSL m[i/o]) for the Speech Intelligibility Index (SII) and high-frequency audibility were traded against a potential risk (i.e., loudness). The modeled performance of each prescription was compared one with another and with the efficient frontier of normal hearing sensitivity (i.e., a reference point for the most return with the least risk). For the pediatric population, NAL-NL2 was more efficient for SII, while DSL m[i/o] was more efficient for high-frequency audibility. For the adult population, NAL-NL2 was more efficient for SII, while the two prescriptions were similar with regard to high-frequency audibility. In terms of absolute return (i.e., not considering the risk of loudness), however, DSL m[i/o] prescribed more outright high-frequency audibility than NAL-NL2 for either aged population, particularly, as hearing loss increased. Given the principles and demonstrated accuracy of desensitization (reduced utility of audibility with increasing hearing loss) observed at the group level, additional high-frequency audibility beyond that of NAL-NL2 is not expected to make further contributions to speech intelligibility (recognition) for the average listener. 2013-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1705 https://doi.org/10.1177/1084713813506301 ETSU Faculty Works Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University hearing aids efficiency modern prescription theory realistic expectations speech recognition Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology Speech and Hearing Science Speech Pathology and Audiology
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic hearing aids
efficiency
modern prescription theory
realistic expectations
speech recognition
Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology
Speech and Hearing Science
Speech Pathology and Audiology
spellingShingle hearing aids
efficiency
modern prescription theory
realistic expectations
speech recognition
Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology
Speech and Hearing Science
Speech Pathology and Audiology
Johnson, Earl E.
Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
description A major decision at the time of hearing aid fitting and dispensing is the amount of amplification to provide listeners (both adult and pediatric populations) for the appropriate compensation of sensorineural hearing impairment across a range of frequencies (e.g., 160?10000?Hz) and input levels (e.g., 50?75?dB sound pressure level). This article describes modern prescription theory for hearing aids within the context of a risk versus return trade-off and efficient frontier analyses. The expected return of amplification recommendations (i.e., generic prescriptions such as National Acoustic Laboratories?Non-Linear 2, NAL-NL2, and Desired Sensation Level Multiple Input/Output, DSL m[i/o]) for the Speech Intelligibility Index (SII) and high-frequency audibility were traded against a potential risk (i.e., loudness). The modeled performance of each prescription was compared one with another and with the efficient frontier of normal hearing sensitivity (i.e., a reference point for the most return with the least risk). For the pediatric population, NAL-NL2 was more efficient for SII, while DSL m[i/o] was more efficient for high-frequency audibility. For the adult population, NAL-NL2 was more efficient for SII, while the two prescriptions were similar with regard to high-frequency audibility. In terms of absolute return (i.e., not considering the risk of loudness), however, DSL m[i/o] prescribed more outright high-frequency audibility than NAL-NL2 for either aged population, particularly, as hearing loss increased. Given the principles and demonstrated accuracy of desensitization (reduced utility of audibility with increasing hearing loss) observed at the group level, additional high-frequency audibility beyond that of NAL-NL2 is not expected to make further contributions to speech intelligibility (recognition) for the average listener.
author Johnson, Earl E.
author_facet Johnson, Earl E.
author_sort Johnson, Earl E.
title Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
title_short Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
title_full Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
title_fullStr Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
title_full_unstemmed Modern Prescription Theory and Application: Realistic Expectations for Speech Recognition With Hearing Aids
title_sort modern prescription theory and application: realistic expectations for speech recognition with hearing aids
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2013
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1705
https://doi.org/10.1177/1084713813506301
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