Abstract

When locating a sound source, listeners are expected to rely more on spectral cues for elevation and temporal cues for azimuth. This work investigates whether sound localization ability can be predicted by individually-measured use of spectral and temporal cues. Participants were older adults with sensorineural hearing loss. Sound sources for the localization task were created in a virtual room, using a mix of virtual and physical loudspeakers in the front hemifield of the listener. Sources were distributed evenly between ±90 deg azimuth and ±20 deg elevation. The signal was a 1 s broadband 4-Hz amplitude-modulated noise. To assess the relationship between localization ability and use of spectral and temporal cues, listeners performed cue weighting and cue discrimination tasks. In the cue weighting task, listeners identified synthetic speech sounds that varied spectro-temporally. The cue discrimination task measured the smallest detectable difference in either spectral or temporal information among the same set of ambiguous speech sounds. Together, these tasks form a cue profile which identifies whether the listener relies to a greater extent on temporal or spectral cues. Older hearing-impaired listeners varied in their ability to localize sounds. Localization results will be discussed in the context of cue profiles and audiometry. [Work supported by NIH.]

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