Abstract

A two microphone adaptive digital noise cancellation technique was used to improve word-recognition ability of normally hearing and hearing-impaired subjects in the presence of varying amounts of multitalker speech babble noise and speech spectrum noise. Signal-to-noise ratios varied from -8 dB to +12 dB in 4 dB increments. The adaptive noise cancellation technique resulted in reducing both the speech babble and speech spectrum noises 18 to 22 dB. This reduction in noise resulted in average improvements in word recognition, at the poorest signal-to-noise ratios, ranging from 37% to 50% for the normally hearing subjects and 27% to 40% for the hearing-impaired subjects. Improvements in word recognition in the presence of speech babble noise as a result of adaptive filtering were just as large or larger than improvements found in the presence of speech spectrum noise. The amount of improvement of word-recognition scores was most pronounced at the least favorable signal-to-noise ratios.

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