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Now showing items 1-10 of 11
Do new hearing aid users prefer less low- frequency, high-frequency, or overall gain than experienced users?
(2006)
There seems to be a widespread belief among clinicians that new hearing aid users prefer less gain than experienced hearing aid users, and therefore that new users will acclimatize to more gain over time. This belief is ...
The Self-Fitting Hearing Aid
(2010)
Sensitivity of cortical auditory evoked potential detection for hearing-impaired infants in response to short speech sounds
(Audiology Research, 2012)
Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs0 are an emerging tool for hearing aid fitting evaluation in young children who cannot provide reliable behavioral feedback. It is therefore useful to determine the relationship ...
Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) in adults in response to filtered speech stimuli
(Journal of the American Academy of Audiology, 2010)
Previous studies have demonstrated the CAEPs can be reliably elicited in response to speech stimuli in listeners wearing hearing aids. It is unclear, however, how close to the aided behavioral threshold (ie. at what ...
Effect of low-frequency gain and venting effects on the benefit derived from directionality and noise reduction in hearing aids
(International Journal of Audiology, 2007-11)
AI-DI = articulation index weighted directivity index, ANOVA = analysis of variance, BKB = Bamford-Kowal-Bench sentences, BTE = Behind-the-ear, CD = Compact Disc, DI = directivity index, famplified = frequency at which the ...
Development of Telscreen: a telephone-based speech-in-noise hearing screening test with a novel masking noise and scoring procedure
(International Journal of Audiology, 2016)
Objective: In 2006 the National Acoustic Laboratories was commissioned to create a telephone-based hearing screening test. Design: NAL
developed ‘Telscreen’, a speech-in-noise test modelled on the Dutch and UK telephone ...
NAL-NL2 empirical adjustments
(Trends in Amplification, 2012)
The relationship between cortical auditory evoked potential (CAEP) detection and estimated audibility in infants with sensorineural hearing loss
(International Journal of Audiology, 2012)
Objective: To determine the effectiveness of objective statistical detection in CAEP testing to evaluate audibility in young infants with sensorineural hearing loss. Design:
CAEP recordings to speech-based stimuli were ...