The effect of a hearing aid noise reduction algorithm on the acquisition of novel speech contrasts

Audiologists are reluctant to prescribe digital hearing aids with active digital noise reduction (DNR) to pre-verbal children due to their potential for an adverse effect on the acquisition of language. The present study investigated the relation between DNR and language acquisition by modeling pre-...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of audiology 2006-12, Vol.45 (12), p.707-714
Hauptverfasser: Marcoux, André M., Yathiraj, Asha, Côté, Isabelle, Logan, John
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container_title International journal of audiology
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creator Marcoux, André M.
Yathiraj, Asha
Côté, Isabelle
Logan, John
description Audiologists are reluctant to prescribe digital hearing aids with active digital noise reduction (DNR) to pre-verbal children due to their potential for an adverse effect on the acquisition of language. The present study investigated the relation between DNR and language acquisition by modeling pre-verbal language acquisition using adult listeners presented with a non-native speech contrast. Two groups of normal-hearing, monolingual Anglophone subjects were trained over four testing sessions to discriminate novel, difficult to discriminate, non-native Hindi speech contrasts in continuous noise, where one group listened to both speech items and noise processed with DNR, and where the other group listened to unprocessed speech in noise. Results did not reveal a significant difference in performance between groups across testing sessions. A significant learning effect was noted for both groups between the first and second testing sessions only. Overall, DNR does not appear to enhance or impair the acquisition of novel speech contrasts by adult listeners.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Taylor & Francis; MEDLINE; Taylor & Francis Medical Library - CRKN
subjects Adult
Algorithms
Children
Female
Hearing aids
Hearing Aids - adverse effects
Humans
Language
Language acquisition
Learning
Male
Noise - prevention & control
Phonemes
Phonetics
Speech Discrimination Tests
Speech Perception
Verbal Learning
title The effect of a hearing aid noise reduction algorithm on the acquisition of novel speech contrasts
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