Abstract

The aim of this study was to test for differences between normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners regarding two fundamental aspects of intensity perception: loudness integration and loudness summation. Loudness functions for three different stimuli were measured using categorical loudness scaling in 8 normal-hearing and 12 hearing-impaired subjects. The results indicated that temporal loudness integration, defined as the difference in SPL between 16.25-ms and 300-ms noise bursts of equal loudness, was larger in the hearing-impaired than in the normal-hearing listeners. Loudness summation, defined as the difference in SPL between a 300-ms, 1,600-Hz tone pip and a white noise burst of the same duration and loudness, did not differ between the two groups. Implications of these results for hearing aid fitting strategies based on loudness normalization are discussed.

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