“…Preferred gain-frequency responses for hearing aids have previously been investigated using a variety of paradigms. Comparison or rating methods require listeners to make judgments about their preference for or perception of sounds after amplification with different gain-frequency responses, either as paired comparisons ( Amlani & Schafer, 2009 ; Byrne, 1986 ; Keidser, et al., 2005 ; Keidser, Dillon, & Byrne, 1995 , Kuk, Harper, & Doubek, 1994 ; Kuk & Lau, 1995a , 1995b ; Kuk & Lau, 1996b ; Kuk & Pape, 1992 , 1993; Moore, Füllgrabe, & Stone, 2011 ; Neuman, Levitt, Mills, & Schwander, 1987 ; Preminger, Neuman, Bakke, Walters, & Levitt, 2000 ; Punch & Howard, 1978 ; Punch & Parker, 1981 ; Punch, Rakerd, & Amlani, 2001 ; Smeds, 2004 ; Stelmachowicz, Lewis, & Carney, 1994 ) or individual, unpaired ratings ( Kuk & Lau, 1996a ; van Buuren, Festen, & Plomp, 1995 ). Another approach is to use adjustment methods which entail assessing the output of a hearing aid after it has been adjusted—often using the volume control—to better match the preferred listening level ( Boothroyd & Mackersie, 2017 ; Boymans & Dreschler, 2012 ; Cox & Alexander, 1991 , 1992; Dreschler, Keidser, Convery, & Dillon, 2008 ; Hornsby & Mueller, 2008 ; Horwitz & Turner, 1997; Humes,Wilson, Barlow, & Garner, 2002 ; Keidser, Dillon, & Convery, 2008 ; Marriage, Moore, & Alcántara, 2004; Polonenko et al., 2010 ; Smeds et al., 2006 ; Souza & Kitch, 2001) or by analyzing the output of trainable hearing aids after completion of a training regime ( Keidser & Alamudi, 2013 ; Mueller, Hornsby, & Weber, 2008 ; Zakis, Dillon, & McDermott, 2007 ).…”