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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.36 609-620 June 1993.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Long-Term and Short-Term Characteristics of Speech

Implications for Hearing Aid Selection for Young Children

Patricia G. Stelmachowicz 1
Anne L. Mace 1
Judy G. Kopun 1

Edward Carney 1

1 Boys Town National Research Hospital Omaha, NE

This study examined the effects of distance and postural position of both parents and children on the long-term and short-term spectral characteristics of speech produced by the parents. Thirty children (ages 2 months to 3 1/2 years) and their parents (30 mothers and 15 fathers) participated. Third-octave band and overall levels of the long-term average speech spectrum (LTASS) for each speech sample were analyzed in three postural positions and a 1-meter reference condition for each age category. Short-term spectral characteristics of three phonemes (/s/, /int/, /tint/) also were analyzed. Results show that typical levels at the input to a child's hearing aid microphone may be as much as 20 dB higher than those found in face-to-face adult conversation. Furthermore, the spectral shape may deviate substantially from an idealized version of the LTASS. Results of the short-term analysis reveal that the peak levels of the three selected phonemes often exceed the LTASS by more than the 12 dB that is often quoted to represent the 1% rms levels of speech in relation to the long-term average. Implications of these results for specific hearing losses are discussed.

KEY WORDS: speech spectrum, hearing aid, children

Submitted on September 4, 1992
Accepted on December 4, 1992


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