People with sensorineural hearing impairment typically have more difficulty than normally hearing people in understanding speech in the presence of background sounds. This paper starts by quantifying the magnitude of the problem in various listening situations and with various types of background sound. It then considers some of the factors that contribute to this difficulty, including: reduced audibility; reduced frequency selectivity; loudness recruitment; and regions in the cochlea which have no surviving inner hair cells and/or neurones (dead regions). Methods of compensating for the effects of some of these factors are described and evaluated. Signal-processing methods to compensate for the effects of reduced frequency selectivity using the output of a single microphone have had only limited success, although methods using multiple microphones have worked well. Amplitude compression can compensate for some of the effects of loudness recruitment, allowing speech to be understood over a wide range of sound levels. The exact form of the compression (fast-acting versus slow-acting, single-channel versus multiple channel) does not seem to be critical, suggesting that the relative loudness of different components of speech, and dynamic aspects of loudness perception do not need to be restored to ''normal''.
The notched-noise method has been widely used to estimate the shape of the auditory filter. Results obtained using this method may be influenced by combination bands produced by the interaction of components within the upper band of noise in the notched-noise masker. To assess the possible effect of such combination bands, results were compared for t•vo types of masker: A notched noise, as used in previous experiments; and a masker in which the upper band of noise was replaced by a sinusold with a frequency corresponding to the lower edge frequency of that band. This is referred to as the noise-tone maskeL The signal frequency was 2 kHz, and measurements were obtained for two different spectrum levels of the noise masker, 30 and 45 dB. Auditory filter shapes derived using the two maskers were similar on their low-frequency sides, as expected. The low-frequency sides were less steep at the higher masker level. The high-frequency sides of the auditory filters derived using the noise-tone masker were sometimes slightly steeper than those obtained using the notched-noise masker, but the effect was generally small. Changes with level on the high-frequency sides were not consistent across subjects. An analysis of the notched-noise data taking into account the effects of the combination bands suggests that the maximal spectrum level of the combination bands, in the region just below the lower spectral edge of the primary noise band, is about 20 to 30 dB below the spectrum level of the primary band. At this relative level, the combination bands have only a very small influence on the high-frequency sides of the derived auditory filters. The influence on the estimated equivalent rectangular bandwidths (ERBs) of the auditory filters is usually negligible.
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