Abstract

Recordings of the pupillary response have been used in numerous studies to assess listening effort during a speech-in-noise task. Most studies focused on averaged responses across listeners, whereas less is known about pupil dilation as an indicator of the individuals’ listening effort. The present study investigated the reliability of several pupil features as potential indicators of individual listening effort and the impact of different normalization procedures on the reliability. The pupil diameters of 31 normal-hearing listeners were recorded during multiple visits while performing a speech-in-noise task. The signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of the stimuli ranged from [Formula: see text]12 dB to [Formula: see text]4 dB. All listeners were measured twice at separate visits, and 11 were re-tested at a third visit. To examine the reliability of the pupil responses across visits, the intraclass correlation coefficient was applied to the peak and mean pupil dilation and to the temporal features of the pupil response, extracted using growth curve analysis. The reliability of the pupillary response was assessed in relation to SNR and different normalization procedures over multiple visits. The most reliable pupil features were the traditional mean and peak pupil dilation. The highest reliability results were obtained when the data were baseline-corrected and normalized to the individual pupil response range across all visits. Moreover, the present study results showed only a minor impact of the SNR and the number of visits on the reliability of the pupil response. Overall, the results may provide an important basis for developing a standardized test for pupillometry in the clinic.

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