The sensitivity of hearing-impaired adults to acoustic attributes in simulated rooms

In previous studies, we have shown that older hearing-impaired individuals are relatively insensitive to changes in the apparent width of broadband noises when those width changes were based on differences in interaural coherence [Whitmer et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 132, 369–379 (2012)]. This insens...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2013-05, Vol.133 (5_Supplement), p.3493-3493
Hauptverfasser: Whitmer, William M., McShefferty, David, Akeroyd, Michael A.
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McShefferty, David
Akeroyd, Michael A.
description In previous studies, we have shown that older hearing-impaired individuals are relatively insensitive to changes in the apparent width of broadband noises when those width changes were based on differences in interaural coherence [Whitmer et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 132, 369–379 (2012)]. This insensitivity has been linked to senescent difficulties in resolving binaural fine-structure differences. It is therefore possible that interaural coherence, despite its widespread use, may not be the best acoustic surrogate of spatial perception for the aged and impaired. To test this, we simulated the room impulse responses for various acoustic scenarios with differing coherence and lateral (energy) fraction attributes using room modeling software (ODEON). Bilaterally impaired adult participants were asked to sketch the perceived size of speech tokens and musical excerpts that were convolved with these impulse responses and presented to them in a sound-dampened enclosure through a 24-loudspeaker array. Participants’ binaural acuity was also measured using an interaural phase discrimination task. Corroborating our previous findings, the results showed less sensitivity to interaural coherence in the auditory source width judgments of older hearing-impaired individuals, indicating that alternate acoustic measurements in the design of spaces for the elderly may be necessary.
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title The sensitivity of hearing-impaired adults to acoustic attributes in simulated rooms
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