Abstract

In this study, increases in loudness with increases in bandwidth, termed loudness summation, were derived from loudness growth functions estimated using a loudness-scaling procedure. The results revealed that at equal loudness category, categorical loudness summation was generally larger in normal-hearing than in hearing-impaired subjects; furthermore, the increase in loudness summation at intermediate loudness levels observed in the former, was absent in the latter. These results, in broad agreement with recent data from the literature, can be explained in the light of physiological data on cochlear compression. One implication of these results regarding hearing aid fitting was that channel-by-channel loudness normalization was effective only when the incoming sound was closed in bandwidth to one of the test stimuli.

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