Compression and expansion of the temporal envelope: evaluation of speech intelligibility and sound quality |
Author(s):
,Journal/Book: J Acoust Soc Am. 1999; 105: 2903-13.
Abstract: Sensorineural hearing loss is accompanied by loudness recruitment, a steeper-than-normal rise of perceived loudness with presentation level. To compensate for this abnormality, amplitude compression is often applied (e.g., in a hearing aid). Alternatively, since speech intelligibility has been modeled as the perception of fast energy fluctuations, enlarging these (by means of expansion) may improve speech intelligibility. Still, even if these signal-processing techniques prove useful in terms of speech intelligibility, practical application might be hindered by unacceptably low sound quality. Therefore, both speech intelligibility and sound quality were evaluated for syllabic compression and expansion of the temporal envelope. Speech intelligibility was evaluated with an adaptive procedure, based on short everyday sentences either in noise or with a competing speaker. Sound quality was measured by means of a rating-scale procedure, for both speech and music. In a systematic setup, both the ratio of compression or expansion and the number of independent processing bands were varied. Individual hearing thresholds were compensated for by a listener-specific filter and amplification. Both listeners with normal hearing and listeners with sensorineural hearing impairment participated as paid volunteers. The results show that, on average, both compression and expansion fail to show better speech intelligibility or sound quality than linear amplification.
Keyword(s): Adult. Aged. Auditory Threshold. Comparative Study. Female. Hearing Aids. Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/rehabilitation. Human. Male. Middle Age. Music. Speech Acoustics. Speech Perception/physiology. Support, Non-U.S. Gov't. Time Factors
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