Evaluation of a method for enhancing interaural level differences at low frequencies.
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Authors
Moore, Brian CJ
Kolarik, Andrew
Stone, Michael A
Lee, Young-Woo
Publication Date
2016-10-20Journal Title
J Acoust Soc Am
ISSN
0001-4966
Publisher
Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
Volume
140
Issue
4
Pages
2817-2817
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Moore, B. C., Kolarik, A., Stone, M. A., & Lee, Y. (2016). Evaluation of a method for enhancing interaural level differences at low frequencies.. J Acoust Soc Am, 140 (4), 2817-2817. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4965299
Abstract
A method (called binaural enhancement) for enhancing interaural level differences at low frequencies, based on estimates of interaural time differences, was developed and evaluated. Five conditions were compared, all using simulated hearing-aid processing: (1) Linear amplification with frequency-response shaping; (2) binaural enhancement combined with linear amplification and frequency-response shaping; (3) slow-acting four-channel amplitude compression with independent compression at the two ears (AGC4CH); (4) binaural enhancement combined with four-channel compression (BE-AGC4CH); and (5) four-channel compression but with the compression gains synchronized across ears. Ten hearing-impaired listeners were tested, and gains and compression ratios for each listener were set to match targets prescribed by the CAM2 fitting method. Stimuli were presented via headphones, using virtualization methods to simulate listening in a moderately reverberant room. The intelligibility of speech at ±60° azimuth in the presence of competing speech on the opposite side of the head at ±60° azimuth was not affected by the binaural enhancement processing. Sound localization was significantly better for condition BE-AGC4CH than for condition AGC4CH for a sentence, but not for broadband noise, lowpass noise, or lowpass amplitude-modulated noise. The results suggest that the binaural enhancement processing can improve localization for sounds with distinct envelope fluctuations.
Keywords
1701 Psychology, Clinical Research, Ear
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/M026957/1)
Rosetrees Trust (JS16/M264)
Leicester Foundation (JS16/M264)
Medical Research Council (G0701870)
Medical Research Council (G8717539)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4965299
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/276368
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http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
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