Abstract
The effects of hearing aid signal processing depend on the voice characteristics of a talker. For example, we have found that the perceptual and acoustic consequences of hearing aid signal processing vary across talkers and that these effects can be explained, in part, by the acoustic differences between the different voices. However, we find that different utterances spoken by the same talker are also differentially affected by the hearing aid signal processing. In this study, we quantified the acoustic and perceptual consequences of hearing aid signal processing on several utterances spoken by the same talker. The voices were presented in quiet and in the presence of babble noise (10 dB SNR). The voices were processed with varying amounts of frequency compression, wide dynamic range compression and noise suppression (spectral subtraction). We considered intra-talker variability using an objective quality metric (Hearing Aid Sound Quality Index) and perceptual ratings of quality. We analyzed sentences from several different speech corpora, including the Hearing-in-Noise Test (HINT), IEEE, and TIMIT. The results showed interactions between the effects of signal processing and the acoustic characteristics of specific utterances spoken by an individual. [Work supported in part by GN ReSound and NSERC.]
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