The loss of peripheral auditory sensitivity, precise temporal processing, and frequency selectivity associated with hearing loss suggests that the results obtained for pure tone glide stimuli will not necessarily correspond to results obtained with more complex dynamic stimuli for listeners with hearing impairment. Normally hearing (NH) and hearing-impaired (HI) listeners identified changes in frequency as rising or falling both for tone glides and for spectrotemporal ripples. Tones glided linearly up or down in frequency with an extent of 1, 0.66, or 0.33 octaves centered around 500 or 1500 Hz. Ripple stimuli, presented in octave bands centered around 500 or 1500 Hz or in a broadband condition extending from 20–20,000 Hz, had a spectral density of 2 cycles/octave and temporal modulation gliding up or down at rates of 1, 4, or 16 Hz. Sensitivity to dynamic changes was assessed as percent correct direction identification and bias was characterized as the ratio of correctly-identified rising versus falling glides. Substantial individual variability was observed for both measures for both the NH and HI listeners, and the ability to perform the tone glide task was not a consistent predictor of the ability to perform the spectrotemporal ripple identification. [Work supported by NIH/NIDCD.]