Abstract

Over the last decade, multiple studies have shown that hearing-impaired listeners’ speech-in-noise reception ability, measured with audibility compensation, is closely associated with performance in spectro-temporal modulation (STM) detection tests. STM tests thus have the potential to provide highly relevant beyond-the-audiogram information in the clinic, but the available STM tests have not been optimized for clinical use in terms of test duration, required equipment, and procedural standardization. The present study introduces a quick-and-simple clinically viable STM test, named the Audible Contrast Threshold (ACT™) test. First, an experimenter-controlled STM measurement paradigm was developed, in which the patient is presented bilaterally with a continuous audibility-corrected noise via headphones and asked to press a pushbutton whenever they hear an STM target sound in the noise. The patient's threshold is established using a Hughson-Westlake tracking procedure with a three-out-of-five criterion and then refined by post-processing the collected data using a logistic function. Different stimulation paradigms were tested in 28 hearing-impaired participants and compared to data previously measured in the same participants with an established STM test paradigm. The best stimulation paradigm showed excellent test-retest reliability and good agreement with the established laboratory version. Second, the best stimulation paradigm with 1-second noise “waves” (windowed noise) was chosen, further optimized with respect to step size and logistic-function fitting, and tested in a population of 25 young normal-hearing participants using various types of transducers to obtain normative data. Based on these normative data, the “normalized Contrast Level” (in dB nCL) scale was defined, where 0 ± 4 dB nCL corresponds to normal performance and elevated dB nCL values indicate the degree of audible contrast loss. Overall, the results of the present study suggest that the ACT test may be considered a reliable, quick-and-simple (and thus clinically viable) test of STM sensitivity. The ACT can be measured directly after the audiogram using the same set up, adding only a few minutes to the process.

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