Assuntos
Correção de Deficiência Auditiva , Auxiliares de Audição , Percepção Auditiva , Surdez/reabilitação , Meio Ambiente , Humanos , Ruído , FalaRESUMO
The monosyllabic work discrimination of normal and hearing-impaired children was evaluated in situations selected to simulate acoustical conditions in current educational environments. All listeners were tested in a high-fidelity (loudspeaker-aided) condition under 12 combinations of reverberation and noise. Hearing-impaired subjects were also evaluated in the same 12 conditions while listening through a monaural hearing aid. Performance of the normal-hearing group was superior to the hearing-impaired listeners in all environments. Results suggest that classroom acoustics should be considered a critical variable in the educational achievement of children.
Assuntos
Acústica , Perda Auditiva Bilateral/fisiopatologia , Perda Auditiva/fisiopatologia , Percepção da Fala , Amplificadores Eletrônicos , Criança , Educação Inclusiva/normas , Auxiliares de Audição , Humanos , Ruído/efeitos adversos , Vibração/efeitos adversosRESUMO
An essential building block for any high-fidelity hearing aid is an amplifier-transducer-coupling combination that does not audibly degrade the sound, that is, provides high-fidelity sound reproduction as judged by someone with normal hearing. To demonstrate that such a combination is possible, two binaural pairs of hearing aids were assembled using available hearing aid transducers and electronic components, one pair of Over-The-Ear hearing aids with 8-kHz bandwidth and one pair of In-The-Ear hearing aids with 16-kHz bandwidth. Objective insertion-gain measurements on these aids, obtained with a KEMAR manikin in a diffuse sound field, revealed a frequency-response accuracy comparable to that available in expensive high-fidelity loudspeakers. Subjective fidelity ratings obtained from three groups of listeners judging prerecorded A-B-A comparisons (made from equalized eardrum-position microphones in a KEMAR manikin) produced a similar conclusion. We conclude that the important question for hearing aid research is no longer "What can a hearing aid be designed to do?" but "What should a hearing aid be designed to do for the hearing impaired?"