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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.29 146-154 June 1986.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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A Signal-to-Noise Ratio Model for the Speech-Reception Threshold of the Hearing Impaired

Reinier Plomp 1
1 Free University Hospital, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

This paper reviews the results of a series of investigations inspired by a model of the speech-reception threshold (SRT) of hearing-impaired listeners. The model contains two parameters accounting for the SRT of normal-hearing listeners (SRT in quiet and signal-to-noise ratio corresponding to the threshold at high noise levels), two parameters describing the hearing loss (attenuation and threshold elevation in terms of signal-to-noise ratio), and three parameters describing the hearing aid (acoustic gain, threshold elevation expressed in signal-to-noise ratio, and equivalent internal noise level). Experimental data are reported for three different types of hearing impairment: presbycusis, hearing losses with a pathological origin, and noise-induced losses. The model gives an excellent description of the data. It demonstrates that for many hearing-impaired persons speech intelligibility at noise levels beyond 50 to 60 dB(A) is their main problem, whereas hearing aids are most effective below that noise level.

Submitted on June 6, 1985
Accepted on October 17, 1985


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Copyright © 1986 by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.